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Dive into the research topics where Didier Busso is active.

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Featured researches published by Didier Busso.


Molecular Cell | 1999

Reconstitution of the Transcription Factor TFIIH: Assignment of Functions for the Three Enzymatic Subunits, XPB, XPD, and cdk7

Franck Tirode; Didier Busso; Frédéric Coin; Jean-Marc Egly

To understand the initiation of the transcription of protein-coding genes, we have dissected the role of the basal transcription/DNA repair factor TFIIH. Having succeeded in reconstituting a functionally active TFIIH from baculovirus recombinant polypeptides, we were able to analyze the role of XPB, XPD, and cdk7 subunits in the transcription reaction. Designing mutated recombinant subunits, we show that the XPB helicase is absolutely required for transcription to open the promoter around the start site whereas the XPD helicase, which is dispensable, stimulates transcription and allows the CAK complex to be anchored to TFIIH. In addition, we also show that cdk7 may phosphorylate the carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA pol II in the absence of promoter opening.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2006

Co-expression of protein complexes in prokaryotic and eukaryotic hosts: experimental procedures, database tracking and case studies

Christophe Romier; Marouane Ben Jelloul; Shira Albeck; Gretel Buchwald; Didier Busso; Patrick H. N. Celie; Evangelos Christodoulou; Valeria De Marco; Suzan van Gerwen; Puck Knipscheer; Joyce H.G. Lebbink; Valerie Notenboom; Arnaud Poterszman; Natacha Rochel; Serge X. Cohen; Tamar Unger; Joel L. Sussman; Dino Moras; Titia K. Sixma; Anastassis Perrakis

Structure determination and functional characterization of macromolecular complexes requires the purification of the different subunits in large quantities and their assembly into a functional entity. Although isolation and structure determination of endogenous complexes has been reported, much progress has to be made to make this technology easily accessible. Co-expression of subunits within hosts such as Escherichia coli and insect cells has become more and more amenable, even at the level of high-throughput projects. As part of SPINE (Structural Proteomics In Europe), several laboratories have investigated the use co-expression techniques for their projects, trying to extend from the common binary expression to the more complicated multi-expression systems. A new system for multi-expression in E. coli and a database system dedicated to handle co-expression data are described. Results are also reported from various case studies investigating different methods for performing co-expression in E. coli and insect cells.


The EMBO Journal | 1997

The structure of cyclin H: common mode of kinase activation and specific features

Gregers R. Andersen; Didier Busso; Arnaud Poterszman; Jae Ryoung Hwang; Jean-Marie Wurtz; Raymond Ripp; Jean-Claude Thierry; Jean-Marc Egly; Dino Moras

The crystal structure of human cyclin H refined at 2.6 Å resolution is compared with that of cyclin A. The core of the molecule consists of two repeats containing five helices each and forming the canonical cyclin fold also observed in TFIIB. One hundred and thirty‐two out of the 217 Cα atoms from the cyclin fold can be superposed with a root‐mean‐square difference of 1.8 Å. The structural homology is even higher for the residues at the interface with the kinase, which is of functional significance, as shown by our observation that cyclin H binds to cyclin‐dependent kinase 2 (cdk2) and that cyclin A is able to activate cdk7 in the presence of MAT1. Based on this superposition, a new signature sequence for cyclins was found. The specificity of the cyclin H molecule is provided mainly by two long helices which extend the cyclin fold at its N‐ and C‐termini and pack together against the first repeat on the side opposite to the kinase. Deletion mutants show that the terminal helices are required for a functionally active cyclin H.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2006

Eukaryotic expression: developments for structural proteomics

Alexandru Radu Aricescu; R. Assenberg; Roslyn M. Bill; Didier Busso; Veronica T. Chang; Simon J. Davis; A. Dubrovsky; Lena Gustafsson; Kristina Hedfalk; Udo Heinemann; Ian M. Jones; D. Ksiazek; Chim C Lang; K. Maskos; Albrecht Messerschmidt; S. Macieira; Yoav Peleg; Anastassis Perrakis; Arnaud Poterszman; G. Schneider; Titia K. Sixma; Joel L. Sussman; Geoffrey C. Sutton; N. Tarboureich; Tzviya Zeev-Ben-Mordehai; E. Yvonne Jones

The production of sufficient quantities of protein is an essential prelude to a structure determination, but for many viral and human proteins this cannot be achieved using prokaryotic expression systems. Groups in the Structural Proteomics In Europe (SPINE) consortium have developed and implemented high‐throughput (HTP) methodologies for cloning, expression screening and protein production in eukaryotic systems. Studies focused on three systems: yeast (Pichia pastoris and Saccharomyces cerevisiae), baculovirus‐infected insect cells and transient expression in mammalian cells. Suitable vectors for HTP cloning are described and results from their use in expression screening and protein‐production pipelines are reported. Strategies for co‐expression, selenomethionine labelling (in all three eukaryotic systems) and control of glycosylation (for secreted proteins in mammalian cells) are assessed.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2011

Robots, pipelines, polyproteins: Enabling multiprotein expression in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells

Lakshmi Sumitra Vijayachandran; Cristina Viola; Frederic Garzoni; Simon Trowitzsch; Christoph Bieniossek; Maxime Chaillet; Christiane Schaffitzel; Didier Busso; Christophe Romier; Arnaud Poterszman; Timothy J. Richmond; Imre Berger

Abstract Multiprotein complexes catalyze vital biological functions in the cell. A paramount objective of the SPINE2 project was to address the structural molecular biology of these multiprotein complexes, by enlisting and developing enabling technologies for their study. An emerging key prerequisite for studying complex biological specimens is their recombinant overproduction. Novel reagents and streamlined protocols for rapidly assembling co-expression constructs for this purpose have been designed and validated. The high-throughput pipeline implemented at IGBMC Strasbourg and the ACEMBL platform at the EMBL Grenoble utilize recombinant overexpression systems for heterologous expression of proteins and their complexes. Extension of the ACEMBL platform technology to include eukaryotic hosts such as insect and mammalian cells has been achieved. Efficient production of large multicomponent protein complexes for structural studies using the baculovirus/insect cell system can be hampered by a stoichiometric imbalance of the subunits produced. A polyprotein strategy has been developed to overcome this bottleneck and has been successfully implemented in our MultiBac baculovirus expression system for producing multiprotein complexes.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2006

Implementation of semi-automated cloning and prokaryotic expression screening: the impact of SPINE

Pedro M. Alzari; H. Berglund; Nick S. Berrow; Elena Blagova; Didier Busso; Christian Cambillau; Valérie Campanacci; Evangelos Christodoulou; S. Eiler; Mark J. Fogg; Gert E. Folkers; Arie Geerlof; Darren J. Hart; Ahmed Haouz; Maria Dolores Herman; S. Macieira; Pär Nordlund; Anastassis Perrakis; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; F. Tarandeau; H. van Tilbeurgh; Tamar Unger; Mark P.A. Luna-Vargas; M. Velarde; M. Willmanns; Raymond J. Owens

The implementation of high-throughput (HTP) cloning and expression screening in Escherichia coli by 14 laboratories in the Structural Proteomics In Europe (SPINE) consortium is described. Cloning efficiencies of greater than 80% have been achieved for the three non-ligation-based cloning techniques used, namely Gateway, ligation-indendent cloning of PCR products (LIC-PCR) and In-Fusion, with LIC-PCR emerging as the most cost-effective. On average, two constructs have been made for each of the approximately 1700 protein targets selected by SPINE for protein production. Overall, HTP expression screening in E. coli has yielded 32% soluble constructs, with at least one for 70% of the targets. In addition to the implementation of HTP cloning and expression screening, the development of two novel technologies is described, namely library-based screening for soluble constructs and parallel small-scale high-density fermentation.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

Huntingtin affinity for partners is not changed by polyglutamine length: aggregation itself triggers aberrant interactions

Aurélien Davranche; Hubert Aviolat; Gabrielle Zeder-Lutz; Didier Busso; Danièle Altschuh; Yvon Trottier; Fabrice A.C. Klein

Huntingtons disease (HD) is caused by the expansion mutation above a length threshold of a polyglutamine (polyQ) stretch in the huntingtin (Htt) protein. Mutant Htt (mHtt) pathogenicity is proposed to rely on its malfunction and propensity to misfold and aggregate. Htt has scaffolding properties and has been reported to interact with hundreds of partners. Many interactors show apparent increased or decreased affinity (dysinteraction) for mHtt, which may account for selective malfunctions and striatal degeneration in HD. These dysinteractions are proposed to result from mutant polyQ conformational changes that remain elusive. To date, dysinteractions have only been studied using semi-quantitative techniques with their outcome potentially influenced by the presence of mHtt aggregates. Therefore, the molecular mechanism underlying these dysinteractions remains to be determined. Here, we have used purified proteins devoid of aggregates to quantify the interaction of normal and mHtt with two partners: SH3GL3, reported to have increased binding to mHtt, and the 2B4 antibody, a model partner. Using surface plasmon resonance and pull-down techniques, we show that in the absence of aggregation polyQ length has no effect on Htt interactions. We demonstrate that the presence of aggregates affects the spatial distribution and solubility of Htt partners and strongly influences the outcome of pull-down experiments. Our results show that expanded polyQ per se does not alter Htt interactions and suggest that aggregated mHtt form molecular platforms that influence the Htt interacting network. Modulating mHtt aggregation could thus have beneficial effects on specific cellular pathways deregulated in HD.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2009

A set of baculovirus transfer vectors for screening of affinity tags and parallel expression strategies

Wassim Abdulrahman; Muriel Uhring; Isabelle Kolb-Cheynel; Jean-Marie Garnier; Dino Moras; Natacha Rochel; Didier Busso; Arnaud Poterszman

We report a set of baculovirus transfer vectors for parallel expression of proteins in fusion with a panel of affinity tags including GST, protein A, thioredoxin, CBP, and FLAG. This suite includes vectors to generate recombinant baculovirus by homologous recombination in insect cells or using the Bac-to-Bac technology. An application of the vector suite approach to the vitamin D receptor (VDR), a protein mainly expressed as inclusion bodies in Escherichia coli, is presented. We found that expression in fusion with GST and protein A provided an efficient compromise of excellent purification with acceptable yields and costs.


BMC Genomics | 2010

Insights into metazoan evolution from alvinella pompejana cDNAs

Nicolas Gagnière; Didier Jollivet; Isabelle Boutet; Yann Brelivet; Didier Busso; Corinne Da Silva; Françoise Gaill; Dominique Higuet; Stéphane Hourdez; Bernard Knoops; François Lallier; Emmanuelle Leize-Wagner; Jean Yves Mary; Dino Moras; Emmanuel Perrodou; Jean-François Rees; Béatrice Segurens; Bruce Shillito; Arnaud Tanguy; Jean-Claude Thierry; Jean Weissenbach; Patrick Wincker; Franck Zal; Olivier Poch; Odile Lecompte

BackgroundAlvinella pompejana is a representative of Annelids, a key phylum for evo-devo studies that is still poorly studied at the sequence level. A. pompejana inhabits deep-sea hydrothermal vents and is currently known as one of the most thermotolerant Eukaryotes in marine environments, withstanding the largest known chemical and thermal ranges (from 5 to 105°C). This tube-dwelling worm forms dense colonies on the surface of hydrothermal chimneys and can withstand long periods of hypo/anoxia and long phases of exposure to hydrogen sulphides. A. pompejana specifically inhabits chimney walls of hydrothermal vents on the East Pacific Rise. To survive, Alvinella has developed numerous adaptations at the physiological and molecular levels, such as an increase in the thermostability of proteins and protein complexes. It represents an outstanding model organism for studying adaptation to harsh physicochemical conditions and for isolating stable macromolecules resistant to high temperatures.ResultsWe have constructed four full length enriched cDNA libraries to investigate the biology and evolution of this intriguing animal. Analysis of more than 75,000 high quality reads led to the identification of 15,858 transcripts and 9,221 putative protein sequences. Our annotation reveals a good coverage of most animal pathways and networks with a prevalence of transcripts involved in oxidative stress resistance, detoxification, anti-bacterial defence, and heat shock protection. Alvinella proteins seem to show a slow evolutionary rate and a higher similarity with proteins from Vertebrates compared to proteins from Arthropods or Nematodes. Their composition shows enrichment in positively charged amino acids that might contribute to their thermostability. The gene content of Alvinella reveals that an important pool of genes previously considered to be specific to Deuterostomes were in fact already present in the last common ancestor of the Bilaterian animals, but have been secondarily lost in model invertebrates. This pool is enriched in glycoproteins that play a key role in intercellular communication, hormonal regulation and immunity.ConclusionsOur study starts to unravel the gene content and sequence evolution of a deep-sea annelid, revealing key features in eukaryote adaptation to extreme environmental conditions and highlighting the proximity of Annelids and Vertebrates.


Journal of Structural and Functional Genomics | 2005

Structural genomics of eukaryotic targets at a laboratory scale.

Didier Busso; Pierre Poussin-Courmontagne; David Rosé; Raymond Ripp; Alain Litt; Jean-Claude Thierry; Dino Moras

Structural genomics programs are distributed worldwide and funded by large institutions such as the NIH in United-States, the RIKEN in Japan or the European Commission through the SPINE network in Europe. Such initiatives, essentially managed by large consortia, led to technology and method developments at the different steps required to produce biological samples compatible with structural studies. Besides specific applications, method developments resulted mainly upon miniaturization and parallelization. The challenge that academic laboratories faces to pursue structural genomics programs is to produce, at a higher rate, protein samples. The Structural Biology and Genomics Department (IGBMC – Illkirch – France) is implicated in a structural genomics program of high eukaryotes whose goal is solving crystal structures of proteins and their complexes (including large complexes) related to human health and biotechnology. To achieve such a challenging goal, the Department has established a medium-throughput pipeline for producing protein samples suitable for structural biology studies. Here, we describe the setting up of our initiative from cloning to crystallization and we demonstrate that structural genomics may be manageable by academic laboratories by strategic investments in robotic and by adapting classical bench protocols and new developments, in particular in the field of protein expression, to parallelization.

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Loubna Salim

University of Strasbourg

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Anastassis Perrakis

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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Raymond J. Owens

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Joel L. Sussman

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yoav Peleg

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Claire Feger

University of Strasbourg

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