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Dive into the research topics where George Szatmari is active.

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Featured researches published by George Szatmari.


Zoological Science | 2009

Two-Dimensional Gravitactic Bioconvection in a Protozoan (Tetrahymena pyriformis) Culture

Tri Nguyen-Quang; Frédéric Guichard; Ana Nicolau; George Szatmari; Georges LePalec; M. Dusser; Josee Lafossee; Jean Louis Bonnet; Jacques Bohatier

Gravitactic bioconvective patterns created by Tetrahymena pyriformis in a Hele-Shaw apparatus were realized and compared with theoretical results. There were found to be two thresholds for bio-convection development: the first indicates the transition from the diffusion to the steady convection state; the second corresponds to the transition from the steady to the unsteady convection state. The results showed that the Hele-Shaw apparatus may be used as a physical analogy of porous media to study 2D bioconvection, with possible extensions to larger scale biological systems where population growth and distribution are driven by similar bio-physical interactions.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

Xer Site Specific Recombination: Double and Single Recombinase Systems

Fabio Castillo; Amal Benmohamed; George Szatmari

The separation and segregation of newly replicated bacterial chromosomes can be constrained by the formation of circular chromosome dimers caused by crossing over during homologous recombination events. In Escherichia coli and most bacteria, dimers are resolved to monomers by site-specific recombination, a process performed by two Chromosomally Encoded tyrosine Recombinases (XerC and XerD). XerCD recombinases act at a 28 bp recombination site dif, which is located at the replication terminus region of the chromosome. The septal protein FtsK controls the initiation of the dimer resolution reaction, so that recombination occurs at the right time (immediately prior to cell division) and at the right place (cell division septum). XerCD and FtsK have been detected in nearly all sequenced eubacterial genomes including Proteobacteria, Archaea, and Firmicutes. However, in Streptococci and Lactococci, an alternative system has been found, composed of a single recombinase (XerS) genetically linked to an atypical 31 bp recombination site (difSL). A similar recombination system has also been found in 𝜀-proteobacteria such as Campylobacter and Helicobacter, where a single recombinase (XerH) acts at a resolution site called difH. Most Archaea contain a recombinase called XerA that acts on a highly conserved 28 bp sequence dif, which appears to act independently of FtsK. Additionally, several mobile elements have been found to exploit the dif/Xer system to integrate their genomes into the host chromosome in Vibrio cholerae, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Enterobacter cloacae. This review highlights the versatility of dif/Xer recombinase systems in prokaryotes and summarizes our current understanding of homologs of dif/Xer machineries.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2003

The XerC recombinase of Proteus mirabilis: characterization and interaction with other tyrosine recombinases

Manuela Villion; George Szatmari

XerC and XerD are two site-specific recombinases, which act on different sites to maintain replicons in a monomeric state. This system, which was first discovered and studied in Escherichia coli, is present in several species including Proteus mirabilis, where the XerD recombinase was previously characterized by our laboratory. In this paper, we report the presence of the xerC gene in P. mirabilis. Using in vitro reactions, we show that the two P. mirabilis recombinases display binding and cleavage activity on the E. coli dif site and the ColE1 cer site, together or in collaboration with E. coli recombinases. In vivo, P. mirabilis XerC and XerD are able to resolve and monomerize a plasmid containing two cer sites, increasing its stability. However, P. mirabilis XerC, in combination with E. coli XerD, is unable to perform these functions.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2003

Interactions of the Caulobacter crescentus XerC and XerD recombinases with the E. coli dif site

Loubna Jouan; George Szatmari

In most bacteria, chromosome dimers arise from homologous recombination between replicated chromosomes. These dimers are then resolved by the action of the XerC and XerD recombinases, which act on the chromosomal dif site in the presence of the FtsK cell division protein. We have cloned the xerC and xerD genes from Caulobacter crescentus, and overexpressed them as maltose-binding protein fusion proteins. These fusion proteins were purified and used in in vitro DNA-binding assays to the Escherichia coli dif site with each protein individually, and in combination with each other. In addition, combinations of Xer proteins from E. coli were also tested for cooperativity with the corresponding C. crescentus proteins.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

Site-specific recombination between ColE1 tcer and NTP16 nmr sites in vivo

Nicolina Zakova; George Szatmari

The site-specific recombination system used by multicopy plasmids of the ColE1 family uses two identical plasmid-encoded recombination sites and four bacterial proteins to catalyze the recombination reaction. In the case of the Escherichia coli plasmid ColE1, the recombination site, cer, is a 280 by DNA sequence which is acted on by the products of the argR, pepA, xerC and xerD genes. We have constructed a model system to study this recombination system, using tandemly repeated recombination sites from the plasmids ColE1 and NTP16. These plasmids have allowed us precisely to define the region of strand exchange during site-specific recombination, and to derive a model for cer intramolecular site-specific recombination.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2010

Escherichia coli ArgR mutants defective in cer/Xer recombination, but not in DNA binding

Hélène Sénéchal; Jérémy Delesques; George Szatmari

The Escherichia coli arginine repressor (ArgR) is an L-arginine-dependent DNA-binding protein that controls the expression of the arginine biosynthetic genes and is required as an accessory factor for Xer site-specific recombination at cer and related recombination sites in plasmids. We used the technique of pentapeptide scanning mutagenesis to isolate a series of ArgR mutants that were considerably reduced in cer recombination, but were still able to repress an argA::lacZ fusion. DNA sequence analysis showed that all of the mutants mapped to the same nucleotide, resulting in a five amino acid insertion between residues 149 and 150 of ArgR, corresponding to the end of the alpha6 helix. A truncated ArgR containing a stop codon at residue 150 displayed the same phenotype as the protein with the five amino acid insertion, and both mutants displayed sequence-specific DNA-binding activity that was L-arginine dependent. These results show that the C-terminus of ArgR is more important in cer/Xer site-specific recombination than in DNA binding.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1998

Cloning and characterisation of the Proteus mirabilis xerD gene

Manuela Villion; George Szatmari


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2013

The Xer/dif site-specific recombination system of Campylobacter jejuni.

Maxime Leroux; Zoulikha Rezoug; George Szatmari


Journal of Biotechnology | 2006

In vitro expression of the restriction endonucleases LlaMI and ScrFI isolated from Lactococcus lactis M19 and UC503

George Szatmari; Ngiep Man Hua; Dimitri Vzdornov; François Daigle; Wanda Smoragiewicz; Margaret D. Mamet-Bratley; Barbara Karska-Wysocki


Plasmid | 1996

Characterization of the Stable Maintenance of the Shigella flexneri Plasmid pHS-2

Nicolas Réhel; George Szatmari

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Loubna Jouan

Université de Montréal

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Fabio Castillo

Université de Montréal

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François Daigle

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Fuli Jia

Université de Montréal

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