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Dive into the research topics where Florence Cordier is active.

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Featured researches published by Florence Cordier.


The EMBO Journal | 2000

Inhibitor binding induces active site stabilization of the HCV NS3 protein serine protease domain

Gaetano Barbato; Daniel O. Cicero; Florence Cordier; Frank Narjes; Benjamin Gerlach; Sonia Sambucini; Stephan Grzesiek; Victor Giulio Matassa; R De Francesco; Renzo Bazzo

Few structures of viral serine proteases, those encoded by the Sindbis and Semliki Forest viruses, hepatitis C virus (HCV) and cytomegalovirus, have been reported. In the life cycle of HCV a crucial role is played by a chymotrypsin‐like serine protease encoded at the N‐terminus of the viral NS3 protein, the solution structure of which we present here complexed with a covalently bound reversible inhibitor. Unexpectedly, the residue in the P2 position of the inhibitor induces an effective stabilization of the catalytic His–Asp hydrogen bond, by shielding that region of the protease from the solvent. This interaction appears crucial in the activation of the enzyme catalytic machinery and represents an unprecedented observation for this family of enzymes. Our data suggest that natural substrates of this serine protease could contribute to the enzyme activation by a similar induced‐fit mechanism. The high degree of similarity at the His–Asp catalytic site region between HCV NS3 and other viral serine proteases suggests that this behaviour could be a more general feature for this category of viral enzymes.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1999

A doublet-separated sensitivity-enhanced HSQC for the determination of scalar and dipolar one-bond J-couplings.

Florence Cordier; Andrew J. Dingley; Stephan Grzesiek

A simple, sensitivity-enhanced HSQC experiment is described which separates the upfield and downfield components in the indirect dimension into different subspectra. The sequence is similar to the generalized TROSY scheme; however, decoupling of the X-nucleus is used during detection. A detailed analysis of relaxation effects, precision and sensitivity of the method is presented. The approach is demonstrated in a two-dimensional water flip-back 1H- 15N HSQC which measures 1JHN splittings in isotropic and oriented samples of ubiquitin and the hepatitis C protease. The results are in excellent agreement with splittings obtained from a conventional 1H-coupled HSQC.


Science Signaling | 2010

Attenuation of Rabies Virulence: Takeover by the Cytoplasmic Domain of Its Envelope Protein

Christophe Prehaud; Nicolas Wolff; Elouan Terrien; Mireille Lafage; Françoise Mégret; Nicolas Babault; Florence Cordier; Gene S. Tan; Elodie Maitrepierre; Pauline Ménager; Damien Chopy; Sylviane Hoos; Patrick England; Muriel Delepierre; Matthias J. Schnell; Henri Buc; Monique Lafon

Survival of rabies virus–infected neurons depends on a single amino acid in the PDZ-binding site of a viral protein. Tipping the Balance Strains of rabies virus, which infects neurons, may be virulent, in which case the cells survive long enough for the virus to replicate and spread, or they may be attenuated, in which case the infected cells die by apoptosis. Préhaud et al. compared one attenuated and one virulent viral strain and found that a single amino acid change in a region of a viral envelope protein that binds to host cell proteins was sufficient to account for the death or survival of infected cells. The binding properties of the attenuated virus protein were expanded, thereby affecting the balance in the activities of host kinases and phosphatases sufficiently to trigger cell death. These findings may inform strategies to engineer attenuated viruses, which are often used in live vaccines. The capacity of a rabies virus to promote neuronal survival (a signature of virulence) or death (a marker of attenuation) depends on the cellular partners recruited by the PDZ-binding site (PDZ-BS) of its envelope glycoprotein (G). Neuronal survival requires the selective association of the PDZ-BS of G with the PDZ domains of two closely related serine-threonine kinases, MAST1 and MAST2. Here, we found that a single amino acid change in the PDZ-BS triggered the apoptotic death of infected neurons and enabled G to interact with additional PDZ partners, in particular the tyrosine phosphatase PTPN4. Knockdown of PTPN4 abrogated virus-mediated apoptosis. Thus, we propose that attenuation of rabies virus requires expansion of the set of host PDZ proteins with which G interacts, which interferes with the finely tuned homeostasis required for survival of the infected neuron.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

The Zinc Finger of NEMO Is a Functional Ubiquitin-binding Domain

Florence Cordier; Olivera Grubisha; François Traincard; Michel Veron; Muriel Delepierre; Fabrice Agou

NEMO (NF-κB essential modulator) is a regulatory protein essential to the canonical NF-κB signaling pathway, notably involved in immune and inflammatory responses, apoptosis, and oncogenesis. Here, we report that the zinc finger (ZF) motif, located in the regulatory C-terminal half of NEMO, forms a specific complex with ubiquitin. We have investigated the NEMO ZF-ubiquitin interaction and proposed a structural model of the complex based on NMR, fluorescence, and mutagenesis data and on the sequence homology with the polymerase η ubiquitin-binding zinc finger involved in DNA repair. Functional complementation assays and in vivo pull-down experiments further show that ZF residues involved in ubiquitin binding are functionally important and required for NF-κB signaling in response to tumor necrosis factor-α. Thus, our findings indicate that NEMOZFisa bona fide ubiquitin-binding domain of the ubiquitin-binding zinc finger type.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Solution structure of NEMO zinc finger and impact of an anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia with immunodeficiency-related point mutation.

Florence Cordier; Emilie Vinolo; Michel Veron; Muriel Delepierre; Fabrice Agou

The regulatory NEMO (NF-kappaB essential modulator) protein has a crucial role in the canonical NF-kappaB signaling pathway notably involved in immune and inflammatory responses, apoptosis and oncogenesis. The regulatory domain is located in the C-terminal half of NEMO and contains a classical CCHC-type zinc finger (ZF). We have investigated the structural and functional effects of a cysteine to phenylalanine point mutation (C417F) in the ZF motif, identified in patients with anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia with immunodeficiency. The solution structures of the wild type and mutant ZF were determined by NMR. Remarkably, the mutant adopts a global betabetaalpha fold similar to that of the wild type and retains thermodynamic stability, i.e., the ability to bind zinc with a native-like affinity, although the last zinc-chelating residue is missing. However, the mutation induces enhanced dynamics in the motif and leads to an important loss of stability. A detailed analysis of the wild type solution structure and experimental evidences led to the identification of two possible protein-binding surfaces that are largely destabilized in the mutant. This is sufficient to alter NEMO function, since functional complementation assays using NEMO-deficient pre-B and T lymphocytes show that full-length C417F pathogenic NEMO leads to a partial to strong defect in LPS, IL-1beta and TNF-alpha-induced NF-kappaB activation, respectively, as compared to wild type NEMO. Altogether, these results shed light onto the role of NEMO ZF as a protein-binding motif and show that a precise structural integrity of the ZF should be preserved to lead to a functional protein-recognition motif triggering full NF-kappaB activation.


Nature Protocols | 2008

Direct detection of N-H[...]O=C hydrogen bonds in biomolecules by NMR spectroscopy.

Andrew J. Dingley; Lydia Nisius; Florence Cordier; Stephan Grzesiek

A nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiment is described for the direct detection of N–H⋯N hydrogen bonds (H-bonds) in 15N isotope-labeled biomolecules. This quantitative HNN-COSY (correlation spectroscopy) experiment detects and quantifies electron-mediated scalar couplings across the H-bond (H-bond scalar couplings), which connect magnetically active 15N nuclei of the H-bond donor and acceptor. Detectable H-bonds comprise the imino H-bonds in canonical Watson–Crick base pairs, many H-bonds in unusual nucleic acid base pairs and H-bonds between protein backbone or side-chain N–H donor and N acceptor moieties. Unlike other NMR observables, which provide only indirect evidence of the presence of H-bonds, the H-bond scalar couplings identify all partners of the H-bond, the donor, the donor proton and the acceptor in a single experiment. The size of the scalar couplings can be related to H-bond geometries and as a time average to H-bond dynamics. The time required to detect the H-bonds is typically less than 1 d at millimolar concentrations for samples of molecular weight ≤≈25 kDa. A 15N/13C-labeled potato spindle tuber viroid T1 RNA domain is used as an example to illustrate this procedure.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

DARPin-assisted crystallography of the CC2-LZ domain of NEMO reveals a coupling between dimerization and ubiquitin binding.

Olivera Grubisha; Monika Kaminska; Stéphane Duquerroy; Elisabeth Fontan; Florence Cordier; Ahmed Haouz; Bertrand Raynal; Jeanne Chiaravalli; Muriel Delepierre; Alain Israël; Michel Veron; Fabrice Agou

NEMO is an integral part of the IkappaB kinase complex and serves as a molecular switch by which the NF-kappaB signaling pathway can be regulated. Oligomerization and polyubiquitin (poly-Ub) binding, mediated through the regulatory CC2-LZ domain, were shown to be key features governing NEMO function, but the relationship between these two activities remains unclear. In this study, we solved the structure of this domain in complex with a designed ankyrin repeat protein, which helps its crystallization. We generated several NEMO mutants in this domain, including those associated with human diseases incontinentia pigmenti and immunodeficiency with or without anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia. Analytical ultracentrifugation and thermal denaturation experiments were used to evaluate the dimerization properties of these mutants. A fluorescence-based assay was developed, as well, to quantify the interaction to monoubiquitin and poly-Ub chains. Moreover, the effect of these mutations was investigated for the full-length protein. We show that a proper folding of the ubiquitin-binding domain, termed NOA/UBAN/NUB, into a stable coiled-coil dimer is required but not sufficient for efficient interaction with poly-Ub. In addition, we show that binding to poly-Ub and, to a lesser extent, to monoubiquitin increases the stability of the NOA coiled-coil dimer. Collectively, these data provide structural insights into how several pathological mutations within and outside of the CC2-LZs NOA ubiquitin binding site affect IkappaB kinase activation in the NF-kappaB signaling pathway.


Science Signaling | 2012

Interference with the PTEN-MAST2 Interaction by a Viral Protein Leads to Cellular Relocalization of PTEN

Elouan Terrien; Alain Chaffotte; Mireille Lafage; Zakir Khan; Christophe Prehaud; Florence Cordier; Catherine Simenel; Muriel Delepierre; Henri Buc; Monique Lafon; Nicolas Wolff

The G protein of rabies virus manipulates the cellular localization of PTEN, which may promote cell survival. Rabies Virus Relocalizes PTEN Virulent strains of rabies virus infect neurons and promote survival of the infected cells to favor viral replication. Among the host factors that inhibit neuronal survival are the phosphatase PTEN and one of its binding partners, the kinase MAST2. PTEN and MAST2 interact through the PDZ domain of MAST2 and the PDZ domain–binding site (PDZ-BS) of PTEN. Terrien et al. found that the rabies virus glycoprotein (G protein), which contains a PDZ-BS, disrupted the MAST2-PTEN complex in infected cells. Structural analysis showed that the surfaces of PTEN and G protein that interacted with MAST2 were similar and contained previously uncharacterized PDZ-binding regions. Finally, disruption of the MAST2-PTEN complex by viral G protein resulted in the relocalization of PTEN from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Together, these data suggest that competition between viral G protein and MAST2 for binding to PTEN plays a role in the survival of infected cells. PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10) and MAST2 (microtubule-associated serine and threonine kinase 2) interact with each other through the PDZ domain of MAST2 (MAST2-PDZ) and the carboxyl-terminal (C-terminal) PDZ domain–binding site (PDZ-BS) of PTEN. These two proteins function as negative regulators of cell survival pathways, and silencing of either one promotes neuronal survival. In human neuroblastoma cells infected with rabies virus (RABV), the C-terminal PDZ domain of the viral glycoprotein (G protein) can target MAST2-PDZ, and RABV infection triggers neuronal survival in a PDZ-BS–dependent fashion. These findings suggest that the PTEN-MAST2 complex inhibits neuronal survival and that viral G protein disrupts this complex through competition with PTEN for binding to MAST2-PDZ. We showed that the C-terminal sequences of PTEN and the viral G protein bound to MAST2-PDZ with similar affinities. Nuclear magnetic resonance structures of these complexes exhibited similar large interaction surfaces, providing a structural basis for their binding specificities. Additionally, the viral G protein promoted the nuclear exclusion of PTEN in infected neuroblastoma cells in a PDZ-BS–dependent manner without altering total PTEN abundance. These findings suggest that formation of the PTEN-MAST2 complex is specifically affected by the viral G protein and emphasize how disruption of a critical protein-protein interaction regulates intracellular PTEN trafficking. In turn, the data show how the viral protein might be used to decipher the underlying molecular mechanisms and to clarify how the subcellular localization of PTEN regulates neuronal survival.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Ordered Phosphorylation Events in Two Independent Cascades of the PTEN C-tail Revealed by NMR

Florence Cordier; Alain Chaffotte; Elouan Terrien; Christophe Prehaud; François-Xavier Theillet; Muriel Delepierre; Monique Lafon; Henri Buc; Nicolas Wolff

PTEN phosphatase is a tumor suppressor controlling notably cell growth, proliferation and survival. The multisite phosphorylation of the PTEN C-terminal tail regulates PTEN activity and intracellular trafficking. The dynamical nature of such regulatory events represents a crucial dimension for timing cellular decisions. Here we show that NMR spectroscopy allows reporting on the order and kinetics of clustered multisite phosphorylation events. We first unambiguously identify in vitro seven bona fide sites modified by CK2 and GSK3β kinases and two new sites on the PTEN C-terminal tail. Then, monitoring the formation of transient intermediate phosphorylated states, we determine the sequence of these reactions and calculate their apparent rate constants. Finally, we assess the dynamic formation of these phosphorylation events induced by endogenous kinases directly in extracts of human neuroblastoma cells. Taken together, our data indicate that two cascades of events controlled by CK2 and GSK3β occur independently on two clusters of sites (S380-S385 and S361-S370) and that in each cluster the reactions follow an ordered model with a distributive kinetic mechanism. Besides emphasizing the ability of NMR to quantitatively and dynamically follow post-translational modifications, these results bring a temporal dimension on the establishment of PTEN phosphorylation cascades.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1995

High-resolution 3D HNCOCA experiment applied to a 28 kDa paramagnetic protein.

Bernhard Brutscher; Florence Cordier; Jean Pierre Simorre; Michael Caffrey; Dominique Marion

SummaryA new triple-resonance 3D HNCOCA pulse scheme is presented, designed to identify the backbone nuclei (HN, N, CO, Cα) of doubly labelled proteins. The two carbon frequencies are labelled along the same indirect dimension and the corresponding dwell times can be independently scaled in order to account for the relaxation properties and chemical shift ranges of the CO and Cα. If one takes advantage of the symmetry properties of the spectra in the course of the peak picking, this 3D scheme has the same sensitivity as the 4D experiment, but with an improved resolution. The sequence is illustrated on a 0.5 mM sample of Rhodobacter capsulatus cytochrome c′ a homodimeric paramagnetic protein of 2×14 kDa. A resonance assignment strategy, based on a low-concentration 13C/15N-labelled sample and a more concentrated 15N-labelled sample, is proposed for proteins where the expression system shows a limited efficiency.

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Bernhard Brutscher

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Dominique Marion

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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