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Dive into the research topics where Etienne Audemard is active.

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Featured researches published by Etienne Audemard.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1985

Molecular movements promoted by metal nucleotides in the heavy-chain regions of myosin heads from skeletal muscle.

Dominique Mornet; Pierre Pantel; Etienne Audemard; J. Derancourt; Ridha Kassab

Molecular movements generated in the heavy-chain regions (27-50-20(X 10(3)) Mr) of myosin S1 on interaction with nucleotides ATP, AMPPNP, ADP and PPi were investigated by limited proteolysis of several enzyme-metal nucleotide complexes in the absence and presence of reversibly bound and crosslinked F-actin. The rate and extent of the nucleotide-promoted conversion of the NH2-terminal 27 X 10(3) Mr and 50 X 10(3) Mr segments into products of 22 X 10(3) Mr and 45 X 10(3) Mr, respectively, were estimated to determine the amplitude of the molecular movements. The 22 X 10(3) Mr peptide was identified by amino acid sequence studies as being derived from cleavage of the peptide bond between Arg and Ile (at position 23 to 24). The 45 X 10(3) Mr peptide, previously shown to represent the NH2-terminal part of the 50 X 10(3) Mr region, would be connected to the adjacent C-terminal 20 X 10(3) Mr region by a pre-existing loop segment of about 5 X 10(3) Mr; the proteolytic sensitivity of the latter region is increased particularly by nucleotide binding. The tryptic reaction proved to be a sensitive indicator of the conformational state of the liganded heavy chain as the rate of peptide bond cleavage in the two regions is dependent on the nature of the bound ligand; it decreases in the order: ATP greater than AMPPNP greater than ADP greater than PPi. It depends also on the nature of the metal present, Mg2+ and Ca2+ being much more effective than K+. Binding of F-actin to the S1-MgAMPPNP complex affords significant protection against breakdown of 27 X 10(3) Mr and 50 X 10(3) Mr peptides, but with concomitant hydrolysis of the 50 X 10(3) Mr-20 X 10(3) Mr junction. Additionally, interaction of MgATP with HMM modulates the tryptic fission of the S1-S2 region. The overall data provide a molecular support for the two-state model of the myosin head and emphasize the involvement of the 50 X 10(3) Mr unit in the mechanism of coupling between the actin and nucleotide binding sites.


Biochimie | 1981

Structural aspects of actomyosin interaction

Ridha Kassab; Dominique Mornet; Pierre Pantel; Raoul Bertrand; Etienne Audemard

Actin binding to myosin-S1 modulates the limited tryptic cleavage of the COOH-terminal region of the 95K heavy chain at the joint connecting the 75K and 20K peptide units; concomitantly actin affords total protection against the resulting loss of acto-S1 Mg2+-ATPase activity. The specificity of the actin effect is illustrated by the fact that it exerts itself not only on free S1 but also on the intact myosin molecule. Mg2+-ATP and Mg2+-ADP impair the protective action of actin to an extent closely related to their respective affinity for the acto-S1 complex. Tryptic fragmentation of S1 heavy chain under highly controlled conditions, using trypsin to S1 weight ratios in the range 1:1000 - 1:1500 led us to establish that peptide bond cleavage at the 75K-20K junction is a sequential process giving rise first to a 22K peptide intermediate which is subsequently converted to the stable 20K fragment. Most importantly, it is also demonstrated that the loss of S1 activation by actin is not due to the initial scission of the 75K-22K linkage but is intimately associated with the breakdown of the 22K precursor into its 20K moiety. Three trypsin-modified S1 derivatives, the heavy chain of which is a complex of two or three fragments, were purified. A detailed analysis of the C-termini of these fragments, as compared to the C-terminal structure of the intact heavy chain, indicated that the 20K fragment is formed mainly through the degradation of a NH2-terminal 2K segment in the 22K precursor and that this proteolytic event is the only one accounting for the acto-S1 ATPase loss. Cross-linking experiments exploiting the reaction of a carbodiimide reagent with rigor complexes containing either fluorescent actin or fluorescent fragmented S1 revealed unequivocally the attachment of the actin monomer to recognition sites on the 20K and 50K units of S1 heavy chain. Specific interactions between the C-terminal 20K domain and light chain LC2 are proposed as being part of the molecular mechanism of the myosin-linked regulation of actomyosin interaction.


Nature | 1981

Structure of the actin–myosin interface

Dominique Mornet; Raoul Bertrand; Pierre Pantel; Etienne Audemard; Ridha Kassab


Biochemistry | 1981

Proteolytic approach to structure and function of actin recognition site in myosin heads.

Dominique Mornet; Raoul Bertrand; Pierre Pantel; Etienne Audemard; Ridha Kassab


FEBS Journal | 1979

Involvement of an Arginyl Residue in the Catalytic Activity of Myosin Heads

Dominique Mornet; Pierre Pantel; Etienne Audemard; Ridha Kassab


Biochemistry | 1986

Abolition of ATPase activities of skeletal myosin subfragment 1 by a new selective proteolytic cleavage within the 50-kilodalton heavy chain segment

Patrick Chaussepied; Dominique Mornet; Etienne Audemard; Jean Derancourt; Ridha Kassab


Biochemistry | 1986

Properties of the alkali light-chain―20-kilodalton fragment complex from skeletal myosin heads

Patrick Chaussepied; Dominique Mornet; Etienne Audemard; Ridha Kassab; Andrew J. Goodearl; Barry A. Levine; Ian P. Trayer


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1989

Caldesmon structure and function: Sequence analysis of a 35 kilodalton actin- and calmodulin-binding fragment from the C-terminus of the turkey gizzard protein

John D. Leszyk; Dominique Mornet; Etienne Audemard; John H. Collins


Biochemistry | 1986

Specific interactions of the alkali light chain 1 in skeletal myosin heads probed by chemical cross-linking

Jean Pierre Labbe; Etienne Audemard; Raoul Bertrand; Ridha Kassab


Biochemistry | 1990

New subfragment 1 of skeletal muscle myosin obtained by thrombin cleavage

Armelle Bonet-Kerrache; Marie Cecile Harricane; Etienne Audemard; Dominique Mornet

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Ridha Kassab

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Raoul Bertrand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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John D. Leszyk

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Patrick Chaussepied

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean Derancourt

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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