Emmanuelle Bancel
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Featured researches published by Emmanuelle Bancel.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007
Gérard Branlard; Emmanuelle Bancel
Seeds may contain different components such as starch and complex carbohydrates that can seriously reduce protein extraction. The proteins in cereal seeds are usually classified in four groups according to their solubility criteria: albumins, globulins, prolamins, and glutelins. They can be specifically extracted. A general procedure for extracting the proteins present in green seeds or immature cereal kernels is given. Then several procedures mostly adapted to cereal seeds are reported for: (1) the whole storage proteins (mostly prolamins and glutelins); (2) the albumins-globulins extracted using salt buffer; (3) the amphiphilic proteins extracted using a phase partitioning process; and (4) the proteins strongly attached to or within the starch granules of the seed endosperm. These procedures have been used for 2-D electrophoresis and proteomic analyses.
Food & Nutrition Research | 2016
Isabel Comino; David Bernardo; Emmanuelle Bancel; María de Lourdes Moreno; Borja Sánchez; Francisco Barro; Tanja Šuligoj; Paul J. Ciclitira; Angel Cebolla; Stella C. Knight; Gérard Branlard; Carolina Sousa
Background Oats provide important nutritional and pharmacological properties, although their safety in coeliac patients remains controversial. Previous studies have confirmed that the reactivity of the anti-33-mer monoclonal antibody with different oat varieties is proportional to the immune responses in terms of T-cell proliferation. Although the impact of these varieties on the adaptive response has been studied, the role of the dendritic cells (DC) is still poorly understood. The aim of this study is to characterize different oat fractions and to study their effect on DC from coeliac patients. Methods and results Protein fractions were isolated from oat grains and analyzed by SDS–PAGE. Several proteins were characterized in the prolamin fraction using immunological and proteomic tools, and by Nano-LC-MS/MS. These proteins, analogous to α- and γ-gliadin-like, showed reactive sequences to anti-33-mer antibody suggesting their immunogenic potential. That was further confirmed as some of the newly identified oat peptides had a differential stimulatory capacity on circulating DC from coeliac patients compared with healthy controls. Conclusions This is the first time, to our knowledge, where newly identified oat peptides have been shown to elicit a differential stimulatory capacity on circulating DC obtained from coeliac patients, potentially identifying immunogenic properties of these oat peptides.
Journal of Proteomics | 2017
Júlio D Nunes-Miranda; Emmanuelle Bancel; Didier Viala; Christophe Chambon; José Luis Capelo; Gérard Branlard; Catherine Ravel; Gilberto Igrejas
Gluten-forming storage proteins play a major role in the viscoelastic properties of wheat dough through the formation of a continuous proteinaceous network. The high-molecular-weight glutenin subunits represent a functionally important subgroup of gluten proteins by promoting the formation of large glutenin polymers through interchain disulphide bonds between glutenin subunits. Here, we present evidences that y-type glutenin subunits encoded at the Glu-B1 locus are prone to proteolytic processing at the C-terminus tail, leading to the loss of the unique cysteine residue present at the C-terminal domain. Results obtained by intact mass measurement and immunochemistry for each proteoform indicate that the proteolytic cleavage appears to occur at the carboxyl-side of two conserved asparagine residues at the C-terminal domain start. Hence, we hypothesize that the responsible enzymes are a class of cysteine endopeptidases - asparaginyl endopeptidases - described in post-translational processing of other storage proteins in wheat. Biological significance The reported study provides new insights into wheat storage protein maturation. In view of the importance of gluten proteins on dough viscoelastic properties and end-product quality, the reported C-terminal domain cleavage of high-molecular-weight glutenin subunits is of particular interest, since this domain possesses a unique conserved cysteine residue which is assumed to participate in gluten polymerization.
Proteomics | 2004
Thouraya Majoul; Emmanuelle Bancel; Eugène Triboi; Jeannette Ben Hamida; Gérard Branlard
Proteomics | 2003
Thouraya Majoul; Emmanuelle Bancel; Eugène Triboi; Jeannette Ben Hamida; Gérard Branlard
Proteomics | 2004
Jerome Dumur; J. Jahier; Emmanuelle Bancel; Michel Laurière; Michel Bernard; Gérard Branlard
Plant Breeding | 2008
L. Caballero; Emmanuelle Bancel; Clément Debiton; Gérard Branlard
Proteomics | 2007
Samy Gobaa; Emmanuelle Bancel; Geert Kleijer; Peter Stamp; Gérard Branlard
Journal of Cereal Science | 2011
Clément Debiton; Marielle Merlino; Christophe Chambon; Emmanuelle Bancel; Mélanie Decourteix; Véronique Planchot; Gérard Branlard
Journal of Cereal Science | 2010
Clément Debiton; Emmanuelle Bancel; Christophe Chambon; Gérard Branlard