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Dive into the research topics where Françoise Tétart is active.

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Featured researches published by Françoise Tétart.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Phylogeny of the Major Head and Tail Genes of the Wide-Ranging T4-Type Bacteriophages

Françoise Tétart; Carine Desplats; Mzia Kutateladze; Caroline Monod; Hans-Wolfgang Ackermann; Henry M. Krisch

We examined a number of bacteriophages with T4-type morphology that propagate in different genera of enterobacteria, Aeromonas, Burkholderia, and Vibrio. Most of these phages had a prolate icosahedral head, a contractile tail, and a genome size that was similar to that of T4. A few of them had more elongated heads and larger genomes. All these phages are phylogenetically related, since they each had sequences homologous to the capsid gene (gene 23), tail sheath gene (gene 18), and tail tube gene (gene 19) of T4. On the basis of the sequence comparison of their virion genes, the T4-type phages can be classified into three subgroups with increasing divergence from T4: the T-evens, pseudoT-evens, and schizoT-evens. In general, the phages that infect closely related host species have virion genes that are phylogenetically closer to each other than those of phages that infect distantly related hosts. However, some of the phages appear to be chimeras, indicating that, at least occasionally, some genetic shuffling has occurred between the different T4-type subgroups. The compilation of a number of gene 23 sequences reveals a pattern of conserved motifs separated by sequences that differ in the T4-type subgroups. Such variable patches in the gene 23 sequences may determine the size of the virion head and consequently the viral genome length. This sequence analysis provides molecular evidence that phages related to T4 are widespread in the biosphere and diverged from a common ancestor in acquiring the ability to infect different host bacteria and to occupy new ecological niches.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

A conserved genetic module that encodes the major virion components in both the coliphage T4 and the marine cyanophage S-PM2

Emma Hambly; Françoise Tétart; Carine Desplats; William H. Wilson; Henry M. Krisch; Nicholas H. Mann

Sequence analysis of a 10-kb region of the genome of the marine cyanomyovirus S-PM2 reveals a homology to coliphage T4 that extends as a contiguous block from gene (g)18 to g23. The order of the S-PM2 genes in this region is similar to that of T4, but there are insertions and deletions of small ORFs of unknown function. In T4, g18 codes for the tail sheath, g19, the tail tube, g20, the head portal protein, g21, the prohead core protein, g22, a scaffolding protein, and g23, the major capsid protein. Thus, the entire module that determines the structural components of the phage head and contractile tail is conserved between T4 and this cyanophage. The significant differences in the morphology of these phages must reflect the considerable divergence of the amino acid sequence of their homologous virion proteins, which uniformly exceeds 50%. We suggest that their enormous diversity in the sea could be a result of genetic shuffling between disparate phages mediated by such commonly shared modules. These conserved sequences could facilitate genetic exchange by providing partially homologous substrates for recombination between otherwise divergent phage genomes. Such a mechanism would thus expand the pool of phage genes accessible by recombination to all those phages that share common modules.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Phage-Antibiotic Synergy (PAS): β-Lactam and Quinolone Antibiotics Stimulate Virulent Phage Growth

André M. Comeau; Françoise Tétart; Sabrina N. Trojet; Marie-Françoise Prère; Henry M. Krisch

Although the multiplication of bacteriophages (phages) has a substantial impact on the biosphere, comparatively little is known about how the external environment affects phage production. Here we report that sub-lethal concentrations of certain antibiotics can substantially stimulate the host bacterial cells production of some virulent phage. For example, a low dosage of cefotaxime, a cephalosporin, increased an uropathogenic Escherichia coli strains production of the phage ΦMFP by more than 7-fold. We name this phenomenon Phage-Antibiotic Synergy (PAS). A related effect was observed in diverse host-phage systems, including the T4-like phages, with β-lactam and quinolone antibiotics, as well as mitomycin C. A common characteristic of these antibiotics is that they inhibit bacterial cell division and trigger the SOS system. We therefore examined the PAS effect within the context of the bacterial SOS and filamentation responses. We found that the PAS effect appears SOS-independent and is primarily a consequence of cellular filamentation; it is mimicked by cells that constitutively filament. The fact that completely unrelated phages manifest this phenomenon suggests that it confers an important and general advantage to the phages.


Molecular Microbiology | 1992

Regulation of the expression of the cell-cycle gene ftsZ by DicF antisense RNA. Division does not require a fixed number of FtsZ molecules

Françoise Tétart; Jean-Pierre Bouché

We show that the 53‐nucieotide RNA molecule encoded by gene dicF blocks cell division In Escherichia coli by inhibiting the translation of ftsZ mRNA. Such a role for dicF had been predicted on the basis of the complementarity of DicF RNA with the ribosome‐binding region of the ffsZ mRNA. An analysis of ftsZ expression at its chromosomal locus, and of an ftsZ–lacZ translational fusion controlled by promoters ftsZ1p and ftsZ2p only, indicates that ftsZ is not autoregulated. Partial inhibition of FtsZ synthesis leads to increased cell size. However, the number of FtsZ molecules per cell can be reduced threefold without affecting the division rate significantly. Our results suggest that septation is not triggered by a fixed number of newly synthesized FtsZ molecules per cell.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Snapshot of the genome of the pseudo-T-even bacteriophage RB49.

Carine Desplats; Christophe Dez; Françoise Tétart; Heı̈dy Eleaume; Henry M. Krisch

RB49 is a virulent bacteriophage that infects Escherichia coli. Its virion morphology is indistinguishable from the well-known T-even phage T4, but DNA hybridization indicated that it was phylogenetically distant from T4 and thus it was classified as a pseudo-T-even phage. To further characterize RB49, we randomly sequenced small fragments corresponding to about 20% of the approximately 170-kb genome. Most of these nucleotide sequences lacked sufficient homology to T4 to be detected in an NCBI BlastN analysis. However, when translated, about 70% of them encoded proteins with homology to T4 proteins. Among these sequences were the numerous components of the virion and the phage DNA replication apparatus. Mapping the RB49 genes revealed that many of them had the same relative order found in the T4 genome. The complete nucleotide sequence was determined for the two regions of RB49 genome that contain most of the genes involved in DNA replication. This sequencing revealed that RB49 has homologues of all the essential T4 replication genes, but, as expected, their sequences diverged considerably from their T4 homologues. Many of the nonessential T4 genes are absent from RB49 and have been replaced by unknown sequences. The intergenic sequences of RB49 are less conserved than the coding sequences, and in at least some cases, RB49 has evolved alternative regulatory strategies. For example, an analysis of transcription in RB49 revealed a simpler pattern of regulation than in T4, with only two, rather than three, classes of temporally controlled promoters. These results indicate that RB49 and T4 have diverged substantially from their last common ancestor. The different T4-type phages appear to contain a set of common genes that can be exploited differently, by means of plasticity in the regulatory sequences and the precise choice of a large group of facultative genes.


Molecular Microbiology | 1992

Involvement of FtsZ in coupling of nucleoid separation with septation

Françoise Tétart; Renaud Albigot; Annie Confer; Egbert Mulder; Jean-Pierre Bouché

The cell‐cycle parameters of an Escherichia coli strain expressing essential division gene ftsZ at one‐fifth of its normal level, because of antisense regulation by DicF RNA, have been analysed. Inhibition of FtsZ expression affects neither the generation time nor the replication initiation mass, the C period, or the constriction period, but it does dramatically retard the initiation of constriction relative to replication termination. Separation of the nucleoids is equally postponed, indicating that division is not coupled to termination of replication, but to partitioning. The severe inhibition of nucleoid separation by DicF RNA, and its suppression by overproduction of FtsZ, suggest a role for FtsZ in the control of separation, and consequently in the coupling of separation and division. We suggest that the normal pattern of nucleoid separation previously found in cells deficient in ftsZ function was a consequence of the loss of a negative effect exerted by FtsZ on separation. In agreement with this view, we find that nucleoid separation is temporarily inhibited after arrest of FtsZ synthesis, but is later resumed as FtsZ is further diluted into the elongating filaments.


Virology | 2007

Modular architecture of the T4 phage superfamily: A conserved core genome and a plastic periphery

André M. Comeau; Claire Bertrand; Andrei Letarov; Françoise Tétart; Henry M. Krisch


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1998

Genome plasticity in the distal tail fiber locus of the T-even bacteriophage: recombination between conserved motifs swaps adhesin specificity

Françoise Tétart; Carine Desplats; Henry M. Krisch


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1997

The genome of the pseudo T-even bacteriophages, a diverse group that resembles T4

C. Monod; F. Repoila; M Kutateladze; Françoise Tétart; Henry M. Krisch


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1996

Bacteriophage T4 Host Range is Expanded by Duplications of a Small Domain of the Tail Fiber Adhesin

Françoise Tétart; F. Repoila; C. Monod; Henry M. Krisch

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Henry M. Krisch

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Carine Desplats

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marie-Françoise Prère

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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André M. Comeau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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C. Monod

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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F. Repoila

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Pierre Bouché

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sabrina N. Trojet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Henry M. Krisch

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Andrei Letarov

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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