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Dive into the research topics where Emmanuel Margeat is active.

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Featured researches published by Emmanuel Margeat.


Science | 2006

Initial transcription by RNA polymerase proceeds through a DNA-scrunching mechanism.

Achillefs N. Kapanidis; Emmanuel Margeat; Sam On Ho; Ekaterine Kortkhonjia; Shimon Weiss; Richard H. Ebright

Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer to monitor distances within single molecules of abortively initiating transcription initiation complexes, we show that initial transcription proceeds through a “scrunching” mechanism, in which RNA polymerase (RNAP) remains fixed on promoter DNA and pulls downstream DNA into itself and past its active center. We show further that putative alternative mechanisms for RNAP active-center translocation in initial transcription, involving “transient excursions” of RNAP relative to DNA or “inchworming” of RNAP relative to DNA, do not occur. The results support a model in which a stressed intermediate, with DNA-unwinding stress and DNA-compaction stress, is formed during initial transcription, and in which accumulated stress is used to drive breakage of interactions between RNAP and promoter DNA and between RNAP and initiation factors during promoter escape.


Traffic | 2009

Dynamic partitioning of a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored protein in glycosphingolipid-rich microdomains imaged by single-quantum dot tracking.

Fabien Pinaud; Gopal Iyer; Emmanuel Margeat; Hsiao-Ping H. Moore; Shimon Weiss

Recent experimental developments have led to a revision of the classical fluid mosaic model proposed by Singer and Nicholson more than 35 years ago. In particular, it is now well established that lipids and proteins diffuse heterogeneously in cell plasma membranes. Their complex motion patterns reflect the dynamic structure and composition of the membrane itself, as well as the presence of the underlying cytoskeleton scaffold and that of the extracellular matrix. How the structural organization of plasma membranes influences the diffusion of individual proteins remains a challenging, yet central, question for cell signaling and its regulation. Here we have developed a raft‐associated glycosyl‐phosphatidyl‐inositol‐anchored avidin test probe (Av‐GPI), whose diffusion patterns indirectly report on the structure and dynamics of putative raft microdomains in the membrane of HeLa cells. Labeling with quantum dots (qdots) allowed high‐resolution and long‐term tracking of individual Av‐GPI and the classification of their various diffusive behaviors. Using dual‐color total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, we studied the correlation between the diffusion of individual Av‐GPI and the location of glycosphingolipid GM1‐rich microdomains and caveolae. We show that Av‐GPI exhibit a fast and a slow diffusion regime in different membrane regions, and that slowing down of their diffusion is correlated with entry in GM1‐rich microdomains located in close proximity to, but distinct, from caveolae. We further show that Av‐GPI dynamically partition in and out of these microdomains in a cholesterol‐dependent manner. Our results provide direct evidence that cholesterol‐/sphingolipid‐rich microdomains can compartmentalize the diffusion of GPI‐anchored proteins in living cells and that the dynamic partitioning raft model appropriately describes the diffusive behavior of some raft‐associated proteins across the plasma membrane.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

The H-NS dimerization domain defines a new fold contributing to DNA recognition

Vanessa Bloch; Yinshan Yang; Emmanuel Margeat; Alain Chavanieu; Marie Thérèse Augé; Bruno Robert; Stefan T. Arold; Sylvie Rimsky; Michel Kochoyan

H-NS, a protein found in Gram-negative bacteria, is involved in structuring the bacterial chromosome and acts as a global regulator for the expression of a wide variety of genes. These functions are correlated with both its DNA-binding and oligomerization properties. We have identified the minimal dimerization domain of H-NS, a 46 amino acid–long N-terminal fragment, and determined its structure using heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy. The highly intertwined structure of the dimer, reminiscent of a handshake, defines a new structural fold, which may offer a possibility for discriminating prokaryotic from eukaryotic proteins in drug design. Using mutational analysis, we also show that this N-terminal domain actively contributes to DNA binding, conversely to the current paradigm. Together, our data allows us to propose a model for the action of full length H-NS.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2008

Single-molecule analysis of CD9 dynamics and partitioning reveals multiple modes of interaction in the tetraspanin web

Cedric Espenel; Emmanuel Margeat; Patrice Dosset; Cécile Arduise; Christian Le Grimellec; Catherine A. Royer; Claude Boucheix; Eric Rubinstein; Pierre-Emmanuel Milhiet

Tetraspanins regulate cell migration, sperm–egg fusion, and viral infection. Through interactions with one another and other cell surface proteins, tetraspanins form a network of molecular interactions called the tetraspanin web. In this study, we use single-molecule fluorescence microscopy to dissect dynamics and partitioning of the tetraspanin CD9. We show that lateral mobility of CD9 in the plasma membrane is regulated by at least two modes of interaction that each exhibit specific dynamics. The majority of CD9 molecules display Brownian behavior but can be transiently confined to an interaction platform that is in permanent exchange with the rest of the membrane. These platforms, which are enriched in CD9 and its binding partners, are constant in shape and localization. Two CD9 molecules undergoing Brownian trajectories can also codiffuse, revealing extra platform interactions. CD9 mobility and partitioning are both dependent on its palmitoylation and plasma membrane cholesterol. Our data show the high dynamic of interactions in the tetraspanin web and further indicate that the tetraspanin web is distinct from raft microdomains.


Microbiology | 2002

MabA (FabG1), a Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein involved in the long-chain fatty acid elongation system FAS-II

Hedia Marrakchi; Stéphanie Ducasse; Gilles Labesse; Henri Montrozier; Emmanuel Margeat; Laurent Emorine; Xavier Charpentier; Mamadou Daffé; Annaı̈k Quémard

The fatty acid elongation system FAS-II is involved in the biosynthesis of mycolic acids, which are very long-chain fatty acids of the cell envelope specific to Mycobacterium tuberculosis and other mycobacteria. A potential component of FAS-II, the protein MabA (FabG1), was overexpressed and purified. Sedimentation equilibrium analyses revealed that MabA undergoes a dimer to tetramer self-association with a dissociation constant of 22 microM. The protein was detected by Western blotting in a mycobacterial cell-wall extract that produces mycolic acids and in the FPLC FAS-II fraction. MabA was shown to catalyse the NADPH-specific reduction of beta-ketoacyl derivatives, equivalent to the second step of a FAS-II elongation round. Unlike the known homologous proteins, MabA preferentially metabolizes long-chain substrates (C(8)-C(20)) and has a poor affinity for the C(4) substrate, in agreement with FAS-II specificities. Molecular modelling of MabA structure suggested the presence of an unusually hydrophobic substrate-binding pocket holding a unique Trp residue, suitable for fluorescence spectroscopic analyses. In agreement with the enzyme kinetic data, the spectral properties of MabA were different in the presence of the C(8)-C(16) ligands as compared to the C(4) ligand. Altogether, these data bring out distinctive enzymic and structural properties of MabA, which correlate with its predilection for long-chain substrates, in contrast to most of the other known ketoacyl reductases.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003

Ligands Differentially Modulate the Protein Interactions of the Human Estrogen Receptors α and β

Emmanuel Margeat; Anne Bourdoncle; Raphael Margueron; Nicolas Poujol; Vincent Cavaillès; Catherine A. Royer

The interactions of human estrogen receptor subtypes ERalpha and ERbeta with DNA and a 210 amino acid residue fragment of the coactivator protein SRC-1 bearing three nuclear receptor interaction motifs were investigated quantitatively using fluorescence anisotropy in the presence of agonist and antagonist ligands. ERalpha and ERbeta were found to bind in a similar manner to DNA, and both salt and temperature affected the affinity and/or stoichiometry of these interactions. The agonist ligands estradiol, estrone and estriol did not modify the binding of ERalpha to the fluorescein-labeled target estrogen response element. However, in the case of ERbeta, these ligands led to the formation of some higher-order protein-DNA complexes and a small decrease in affinity. The partial agonist 4-hydroxytamoxifen had little effect on either ER subtype, whereas the pure antagonist ICI 182,780 led to the cooperative formation of protein-DNA complexes of higher order than dimer, as further demonstrated by competition experiments and gel mobility-shift assays. In addition to DNA binding, the interaction of both ER subtypes with the Alexa488-labeled SRC-1 coactivator fragment was investigated by fluorescence anisotropy. The agonist ligands estrone, estradiol, estriol, genistein and ethynyl estradiol exhibited distinct capacities for inducing the recruitment of SRC-1 that were not correlated with their affinity for the receptor. Moreover, estrone and genistein exhibited subtype specificity in that they induced SRC-1 recruitment to ERbeta with much higher efficiency than in the case of ERalpha. The differential coactivator recruitment capacities of the ER agonists and their receptor subtype coactivator recruitment specificity may be linked to the molecular structure of the agonists with respect to their interactions with a specific histidine residue located at the back of the ligand-binding pocket. Altogether, these quantitative in vitro studies of ER interactions reveal the complex energetic and stoichiometric consequences of changes in the chemical structures of these proteins and their ligands.


Traffic | 2010

HIV-1 assembly differentially alters dynamics and partitioning of tetraspanins and raft components.

Dimitry N. Krementsov; Patrice Rassam; Emmanuel Margeat; Nathan H. Roy; Jürgen Schneider-Schaulies; Pierre-Emmanuel Milhiet; Markus Thali

Partitioning of membrane proteins into various types of microdomains is crucial for many cellular functions. Tetraspanin‐enriched microdomains (TEMs) are a unique type of protein‐based microdomain, clearly distinct from membrane rafts, and important for several cellular processes such as fusion, migration and signaling. Paradoxically, HIV‐1 assembly/egress occurs at TEMs, yet the viral particles also incorporate raft lipids.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2000

Quantitative characterization of the interaction between purified human estrogen receptor α and DNA using fluorescence anisotropy

Mireille Boyer; Nicolas Poujol; Emmanuel Margeat; Catherine A. Royer

In an effort to better define the molecular mechanisms of the functional specificity of human estrogen receptor alpha, we have carried out equilibrium binding assays to study the interaction of the receptor with a palindromic estrogen response element derived from the vitellogenin ERE. These assays are based on the observation of the fluorescence anisotropy of a fluorescein moiety covalently bound to the target oligonucleotide. The low anisotropy value due to the fast tumbling of the free oligonucleotide in solution increases substantially upon binding the receptor to the labeled ERE. The quality of our data are sufficient to ascertain that the binding is clearly cooperative in nature, ruling out a simple monomer interaction and implicating a dimerization energetically coupled to DNA binding in the nanomolar range. The salt concentration dependence of the affinity reveals formation of high stoichiometry, low specificity complexes at low salt concentration. Increasing the KCl concentration above 200 mM leads to specific binding of ER dimer. We interpret the lack of temperature dependence of the apparent affinity as indicative of an entropy driven interaction. Finally, binding assays using fluorescent target EREs bearing mutations of each of the base pairs in the palindromic ERE half-site indicate that the energy of interaction between ER and its target is relatively evenly distributed throughout the site.


PLOS Biology | 2013

Recruitment, Assembly, and Molecular Architecture of the SpoIIIE DNA Pump Revealed by Superresolution Microscopy

Jean-Bernard Fiche; Diego I. Cattoni; Nele Diekmann; Julio Mateos Langerak; Caroline Clerté; Catherine A. Royer; Emmanuel Margeat; Thierry Doan

Super-resolution and fluctuation microscopy in a model DNA-segregation system reveal the architecture and assembly mechanism of the motor responsible for DNA translocation during bacterial cell division.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Chromatin Insulator Factors Involved in Long-Range DNA Interactions and Their Role in the Folding of the Drosophila Genome

Jutta Vogelmann; Antoine Le Gall; Stephanie Dejardin; Frédéric Allemand; Adrien Gamot; Gilles Labesse; Olivier Cuvier; Nicolas Nègre; Martin Cohen-Gonsaud; Emmanuel Margeat

Chromatin insulators are genetic elements implicated in the organization of chromatin and the regulation of transcription. In Drosophila, different insulator types were characterized by their locus-specific composition of insulator proteins and co-factors. Insulators mediate specific long-range DNA contacts required for the three dimensional organization of the interphase nucleus and for transcription regulation, but the mechanisms underlying the formation of these contacts is currently unknown. Here, we investigate the molecular associations between different components of insulator complexes (BEAF32, CP190 and Chromator) by biochemical and biophysical means, and develop a novel single-molecule assay to determine what factors are necessary and essential for the formation of long-range DNA interactions. We show that BEAF32 is able to bind DNA specifically and with high affinity, but not to bridge long-range interactions (LRI). In contrast, we show that CP190 and Chromator are able to mediate LRI between specifically-bound BEAF32 nucleoprotein complexes in vitro. This ability of CP190 and Chromator to establish LRI requires specific contacts between BEAF32 and their C-terminal domains, and dimerization through their N-terminal domains. In particular, the BTB/POZ domains of CP190 form a strict homodimer, and its C-terminal domain interacts with several insulator binding proteins. We propose a general model for insulator function in which BEAF32/dCTCF/Su(HW) provide DNA specificity (first layer proteins) whereas CP190/Chromator are responsible for the physical interactions required for long-range contacts (second layer). This network of organized, multi-layer interactions could explain the different activities of insulators as chromatin barriers, enhancer blockers, and transcriptional regulators, and suggest a general mechanism for how insulators may shape the organization of higher-order chromatin during cell division.

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Catherine A. Royer

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Shimon Weiss

University of California

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Marc Boudvillain

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Annie Schwartz

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Linnéa Olofsson

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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