Edouard Yeramian
Pasteur Institute
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Edouard Yeramian.
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2010
Estelle Marion; Sara Eyangoh; Edouard Yeramian; Julien Marie C. Doannio; Jordi Landier; Jacques Aubry; Arnaud Fontanet; Christophe Rogier; Viviane Cassisa; Jane Cottin; Agnès Marot; Matthieu Eveillard; Yannick Kamdem; Pierre Legras; Caroline Deshayes; Jean-Paul Saint-André; Laurent Marsollier
Background Buruli ulcer, the third mycobacterial disease after tuberculosis and leprosy, is caused by the environmental mycobacterium M. ulcerans. Various modes of transmission have been suspected for this disease, with no general consensus acceptance for any of them up to now. Since laboratory models demonstrated the ability of water bugs to transmit M. ulcerans, a particular attention is focused on the transmission of the bacilli by water bugs as hosts and vectors. However, it is only through detailed knowledge of the biodiversity and ecology of water bugs that the importance of this mode of transmission can be fully assessed. It is the objective of the work here to decipher the role of water bugs in M. ulcerans ecology and transmission, based on large-scale field studies. Methodology/Principal Findings The distribution of M. ulcerans-hosting water bugs was monitored on previously unprecedented time and space scales: a total of 7,407 water bugs, belonging to large number of different families, were collected over one year, in Buruli ulcer endemic and non endemic areas in central Cameroon. This study demonstrated the presence of M. ulcerans in insect saliva. In addition, the field results provided a full picture of the ecology of transmission in terms of biodiversity and detailed specification of seasonal and regional dynamics, with large temporal heterogeneity in the insect tissue colonization rate and detection of M. ulcerans only in water bug tissues collected in Buruli ulcer endemic areas. Conclusion/Significance The large-scale detection of bacilli in saliva of biting water bugs gives enhanced weight to their role in M. ulcerans transmission. On practical grounds, beyond the ecological interest, the results concerning seasonal and regional dynamics can provide an efficient tool in the hands of sanitary authorities to monitor environmental risks associated with Buruli ulcer.
BMC Genomics | 2006
Fredj Tekaia; Edouard Yeramian
BackgroundThe evolutionary characterization of species and lifestyles at global levels is nowadays a subject of considerable interest, particularly with the availability of many complete genomes. Are there specific properties associated with lifestyles and phylogenies? What are the underlying evolutionary trends? One of the simplest analyses to address such questions concerns characterization of proteomes at the amino acids composition level.ResultsIn this work, amino acid compositions of a large set of 208 proteomes, with significant number of representatives from the three phylogenetic domains and different lifestyles are analyzed, resorting to an appropriate multidimensional method: Correspondence analysis. The analysis reveals striking discrimination between eukaryotes, prokaryotic mesophiles and hyperthemophiles-themophiles, following amino acid usage. In sharp contrast, no similar discrimination is observed for psychrophiles. The observed distributional properties are compared with various inferred chronologies for the recruitment of amino acids into the genetic code. Such comparisons reveal correlations between the observed segregations of species following amino acid usage, and the separation of amino acids following early or late recruitment.ConclusionA simple description of proteomes according to amino acid compositions reveals striking signatures, with sharp segregations or on the contrary non-discriminations following phylogenies and lifestyles. The distribution of species, following amino acid usage, exhibits a discrimination between [high GC]-[high optimal growth temperatures] and [low GC]-[moderate temperatures] characteristics. This discrimination appears to coincide closely with the separation of amino acids following their inferred early or late recruitment into the genetic code. Taken together the various results provide a consistent picture for the evolution of proteomes, in terms of amino acid usage.
Gene | 2003
Emmanuel Quevillon; Tobias Spielmann; Karima Brahimi; Debasish Chattopadhyay; Edouard Yeramian; Gordon Langsley
Rab GTPases are key regulators of vesicular traffic in eukaryotic cells. Here we sought a global characterization and description of the Plasmodium falciparum family of Rab GTPases. We used a combination of bioinformatic analyses, experimental testing of predictions, structure modelling and phylogenetics. These analyses led to the identification of seven new parasite Rabs. Accordingly we estimate that the P. falciparum family is made up of 11 genes. We show that ten members of this family are transcribed in infected erythrocytes. Concerning the various members of the family, a series of specific as well as global conclusions can be drawn. Rabs predicted to be compartment-specific show different subcellular distributions. This is demonstrated for PfRab1A and PfRab11A, with the generation of specific antisera. The sequence analyses reveal several peculiarities, with possible functional implications. One of the transcribed genes, Pfrab5b, does not encode a classical C-terminus, suggestive of a novel regulatory role for this GTPase. Another, Pfrab5a, previously identified as a rab gene located on chromosome 2, possesses a 30-amino-acid insertion in its GTP-binding domain. Structural considerations suggest that this insertion could represent a novel interaction interface. We used conserved RabF and RabSF motifs to discriminate between specific parasite Rabs, and followed their predicted change in position on the structure of PfRab6, as GTP is hydrolysed to GDP. This allowed us to propose their involvement in potential interaction surfaces, that we extended to human Rab6 and the motifs known to mediate Rabkinesine-6 binding. Finally, we compared the P. falciparum Rab family to those of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe and found that parasite Rabs segregate into possible functional clads. Such grouping into clads may give clues to parasite Rab function, and may shed light on P. falciparum secretory/endocytic pathways.
PLOS Medicine | 2007
Laurent Marsollier; Estelle Deniaux; Priscille Brodin; Agnès Marot; Christelle Mbondji Wondje; Jean-Paul Saint-André; Annick Chauty; Christian Johnson; Fredj Tekaia; Edouard Yeramian; Pierre Legras; Bernard Carbonnelle; Gilles Reysset; Sara Eyangoh; Geneviève Milon; Stewart T. Cole; Jacques Aubry
Background Buruli ulcer is a severe human skin disease caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans. This disease is primarily diagnosed in West Africa with increasing incidence. Antimycobacterial drug therapy is relatively effective during the preulcerative stage of the disease, but surgical excision of lesions with skin grafting is often the ultimate treatment. The mode of transmission of this Mycobacterium species remains a matter of debate, and relevant interventions to prevent this disease lack (i) the proper understanding of the M. ulcerans life history traits in its natural aquatic ecosystem and (ii) immune signatures that could be correlates of protection. We previously set up a laboratory ecosystem with predatory aquatic insects of the family Naucoridae and laboratory mice and showed that (i) M. ulcerans-carrying aquatic insects can transmit the mycobacterium through bites and (ii) that their salivary glands are the only tissues hosting replicative M. ulcerans. Further investigation in natural settings revealed that 5%–10% of these aquatic insects captured in endemic areas have M. ulcerans–loaded salivary glands. In search of novel epidemiological features we noticed that individuals working close to aquatic environments inhabited by insect predators were less prone to developing Buruli ulcers than their relatives. Thus we set out to investigate whether those individuals might display any immune signatures of exposure to M. ulcerans-free insect predator bites, and whether those could correlate with protection. Methods and Findings We took a two-pronged approach in this study, first investigating whether the insect bites are protective in a mouse model, and subsequently looking for possibly protective immune signatures in humans. We found that, in contrast to control BALB/c mice, BALB/c mice exposed to Naucoris aquatic insect bites or sensitized to Naucoris salivary gland homogenates (SGHs) displayed no lesion at the site of inoculation of M. ulcerans coated with Naucoris SGH components. Then using human serum samples collected in a Buruli ulcer–endemic area (in the Republic of Benin, West Africa), we assayed sera collected from either ulcer-free individuals or patients with Buruli ulcers for the titre of IgGs that bind to insect predator SGH, focusing on those molecules otherwise shown to be retained by M. ulcerans colonies. IgG titres were lower in the Buruli ulcer patient group than in the ulcer-free group. Conclusions These data will help structure future investigations in Buruli ulcer–endemic areas, providing a rationale for research into human immune signatures of exposure to predatory aquatic insects, with special attention to those insect saliva molecules that bind to M. ulcerans.
Genetics | 2009
Marie-Claude Marsolier-Kergoat; Edouard Yeramian
Recombination plays a crucial role in the evolution of genomes. Among many chromosomal features, GC content is one of the most prominent variables that appear to be highly correlated with recombination. However, it is not yet clear (1) whether recombination drives GC content (as proposed, for example, in the biased gene conversion model) or the converse and (2) what are the length scales for mutual influences between GC content and recombination. Here we have reassessed these questions for the model genome Saccharomyces cerevisiae, for which the most refined recombination data are available. First, we confirmed a strong correlation between recombination rate and GC content at local scales (a few kilobases). Second, on the basis of alignments between S. cerevisiae, S. paradoxus, and S. mikatae sequences, we showed that the inferred AT/GC substitution patterns are not correlated with recombination, indicating that GC content is not driven by recombination in yeast. These results thus suggest that, in S. cerevisiae, recombination is determined either by the GC content or by a third parameter, also affecting the GC content. Third, we observed long-range correlations between GC and recombination for chromosome III (for which such correlations were reported experimentally and were the model for many structural studies). However, similar correlations were not detected in the other chromosomes, restraining thus the generality of the phenomenon. These results pave the way for further analyses aimed at the detailed untangling of drives involved in the evolutionary shaping of the yeast genome.
Gene | 2000
Edouard Yeramian
A gene identification procedure is formulated, based on large-scale structural analyses of genomic sequences. The structural property is the physical - thermal - stability of the DNA double-helix, as described by the classical helix-coil model. The analyses are detailed for the Plasmodium falciparum genome, which represents one of the most difficult cases for the gene identification problem (notably because of the extreme AT-richness of the genome). In this genome, the coding domains (either uninterrupted genes or exons in split genes) are accurately identified as regions of high thermal stability. The conclusion is based on the study of the available cloned genes, of which 17 examples are described in detail. These examples demonstrate that the physical criterion is valid for the detection of coding regions whose lengths extend from a few base pairs up to several thousand base pairs. Accordingly, the structural analyses can provide a powerful and convenient tool for the identification of complex genes in the P. falciparum genome. The limits of such a scheme are discussed. The gene identification procedure is applied to the completely sequenced chromosomes (2 and 3), and the results are compared with the database annotations. The structural analyses suggest more or less extensive revision to the annotations, and also allow new putative genes to be identified in the chromosome sequences. Several examples of such new genes are described in detail.
Research in Microbiology | 1999
Edouard Yeramian; Henri Buc
A series of complete bacterial genome sequences have recently become available and powerful methods have been developed for the identification of tandem repeats on a very large scale. It is thus possible to derive extensive comparative descriptions of such repeats at the level of complete genomes, as illustrated here for three different bacterial genomes: Escherichia coli, Haemophilus influenzae, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Such sequence analyses can be usefully complemented by structural characterisations of the repeats.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2003
Edouard Yeramian; Louis M. Jones
The GeneFizz (http://pbga.pasteur.fr/GeneFizz) web tool permits the direct comparison between two types of segmentations for DNA sequences (possibly annotated): the coding/non-coding segmentation associated with genomic annotations (simple genes or exons in split genes) and the physics-based structural segmentation between helix and coil domains (as provided by the classical helix-coil model). There appears to be a varying degree of coincidence for different genomes between the two types of segmentations, from almost perfect to non-relevant. Following these two extremes, GeneFizz can be used for two purposes: ab initio physics-based identification of new genes (as recently shown for Plasmodium falciparum) or the exploration of possible evolutionary signals revealed by the discrepancies observed between the two types of information.
Bioinformatics | 2002
Edouard Yeramian; Serge Bonnefoy; Gordon Langsley
The ab initio prediction of new genes in eukaryotic genomes represents a difficult task, notably for the identification of complex split genes. A Physics-Based Gene Identification (PBGI) method was formulated recently (Yeramian, Gene, 255, 139-150, 151-168, 2000a,b) to address this problem, taking as a model the Plasmodium falciparum genome. Here, the predictive power of this method is put under experimental test for this genome. The presented results demonstrate the usefulness of the PBGI as a gene-identification tool for P. falciparum, notably for the discovery of new genes with no homology to known genes. Perspectives opened by this new method for other eukaryotic genomes are also mentioned.
The International Journal of Mycobacteriology | 2014
Estelle Marion; Annick Chauty; Edouard Yeramian; Jérémie Babonneau; Marie Kempf; Laurent Marsollier
Buruli ulcer is a cutaneous mycobacterial disease caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans, whose incidence is increasing steadily, especially in West Africa. This study reports a first documented case of M. ulcerans infection which can be attributed to a water bug bite at the site of the primary lesion.