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Dive into the research topics where Gerardo Turcatti is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerardo Turcatti.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

BTA, a novel reagent for DNA attachment on glass and efficient generation of solid-phase amplified DNA colonies

Milan Fedurco; Anthony Romieu; Scott D. Williams; Isabelle Lawrence; Gerardo Turcatti

The tricarboxylate reagent benzene-1,3,5-triacetic acid (BTA) was used to attach 5′-aminated DNA primers and templates on an aminosilanized glass surface for subsequent generation of DNA colonies by in situ solid-phase amplification. We have characterized the derivatized surfaces for the chemical attachment of oligonucleotides and evaluate the properties relevant for the amplification process: surface density, thermal stability towards thermocycling, functionalization reproducibility and storage stability. The derivatization process, first developed for glass slides, was then adapted to microfabricated glass channels containing integrated fluidic connections. This implementation resulted in an important reduction of reaction times, consumption of reagents and process automation. Innovative analytical methods for the characterization of attached DNA were developed for assessing the surface immobilized DNA content after amplification. The results obtained showed that the BTA chemistry is compatible and suitable for forming highly dense arrays of DNA colonies with optimal surface coverage of about 10 million colonies/cm2 from the amplification of initial single-template DNA molecules immobilized. We also demonstrate that the dsDNA colonies generated can be quantitatively processed in situ by restriction enzymes digestion. DNA colonies generated using the BTA reagent can be used for further sequence analysis in an unprecedented parallel fashion for low-cost genomic studies.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Probing the Structure and Function of the Tachykinin Neurokinin-2 Receptor through Biosynthetic Incorporation of Fluorescent Amino Acids at Specific Sites

Gerardo Turcatti; Karin Nemeth; Michael D. Edgerton; Ulrich Meseth; François Talabot; Manuel C. Peitsch; Jonathan Knowles; Horst Vogel; André Chollet

A general method for understanding the mechanisms of ligand recognition and activation of G protein-coupled receptors has been developed. A study of ligand-receptor interactions in the prototypic seven-transmembrane neurokinin-2 receptor (NK2) using this fluorescence-based approach is presented. A fluorescent unnatural amino acid was introduced at known sites into NK2 by suppression of UAG nonsense codons with the aid of a chemically misacylated synthetic tRNA specifically designed for the incorporation of unnatural amino acids during heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. Fluorescence-labeled NK2 mutants containing an unique 3-N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)-2,3-diaminopropionic acid (NBD-Dap) residue at either site 103, in the first extracellular loop, or 248, in the third cytoplasmic loop, were functionally active. The fluorescent NK2 mutants were investigated by microspectrofluorimetry in a native membrane environment. Intermolecular distances were determined by measuring the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between the fluorescent unnatural amino acid and a fluorescently labeled NK2 heptapeptide antagonist. These distances, calculated by the theory of Förster, permit to fix the ligand in space and define the structure of the receptor in a molecular model for NK2 ligand-receptor interactions. Our data are the first report of the incorporation of a fluorescent unnatural amino acid into a membrane protein in intact cells by the method of nonsense codon suppression, as well as the first measurement of experimental distances between a G protein-coupled receptor and its ligand by FRET. The method presented here can be generally applied to the analysis of spatial relationships in integral membrane proteins such as receptors or channels.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

A new class of cleavable fluorescent nucleotides: synthesis and optimization as reversible terminators for DNA sequencing by synthesis

Gerardo Turcatti; Anthony Romieu; Milan Fedurco; Ana-Paula Tairi

Fluorescent 2′-deoxynucleotides containing a protecting group at the 3′-O-position are reversible terminators enabling array-based DNA sequencing by synthesis (SBS) approaches. Herein, we describe the synthesis of a new family of 3′-OH unprotected cleavable fluorescent 2′-deoxynucleotides and their evaluation as reversible terminators for high-throughput DNA SBS strategies. In this first version, all four modified nucleotides bearing a cleavable disulfide Alexa Fluor® 594 dye were assayed for their ability to act as a reversible stop for the incorporation of the next labeled base. Their use in SBS leaded to a signal–no signal output after successive addition of each labeled nucleotide during the sequencing process (binary read-out). Solid-phase immobilized synthetic DNA target sequences were used to optimize the method that has been applied to DNA polymerized colonies or clusters obtained by in situ solid-phase amplification of fragments of genomic DNA templates.


Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2016

Screening out irrelevant cell-based models of disease.

Peter Horvath; Nathalie Aulner; Marc Bickle; Anthony Davies; Elaine Del Nery; Daniel Ebner; María C. Montoya; Päivi Östling; Vilja Pietiäinen; Leo Price; Spencer Shorte; Gerardo Turcatti; Carina von Schantz; Neil O. Carragher

The common and persistent failures to translate promising preclinical drug candidates into clinical success highlight the limited effectiveness of disease models currently used in drug discovery. An apparent reluctance to explore and adopt alternative cell- and tissue-based model systems, coupled with a detachment from clinical practice during assay validation, contributes to ineffective translational research. To help address these issues and stimulate debate, here we propose a set of principles to facilitate the definition and development of disease-relevant assays, and we discuss new opportunities for exploiting the latest advances in cell-based assay technologies in drug discovery, including induced pluripotent stem cells, three-dimensional (3D) co-culture and organ-on-a-chip systems, complemented by advances in single-cell imaging and gene editing technologies. Funding to support precompetitive, multidisciplinary collaborations to develop novel preclinical models and cell-based screening technologies could have a key role in improving their clinical relevance, and ultimately increase clinical success rates.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Characterization of Non-peptide Antagonist and Peptide Agonist Binding Sites of the NK1 Receptor with Fluorescent Ligands

Gerardo Turcatti; Sannah Zoffmann; John A. Lowe; Susan E. Drozda; Gérard Chassaing; Thue W. Schwartz; André Chollet

Ligand recognition of the NK1 receptor (substance P receptor) by peptide agonist and non-peptide antagonist has been investigated and compared by the use of fluorescent ligands and spectrofluorometric methods. Analogues of substance P (SP) labeled with the environment-sensitive fluorescent group 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl (dansyl) at either position 3, 8, or 11 or with fluorescein at theN α position were synthesized and characterized. Peptides modified at the α-amino group or at positions 3 or 11 conserved a relatively good affinity for NK1 and agonistic properties. Modification at position 8 resulted in an 18,000-fold decrease in affinity. A fluorescent dansyl analogue of the non-peptide antagonist CP96,345 was prepared and characterized. The quantum yield of fluorescence for dansyl-CP96,345 was much higher than for any of the dansyl-labeled peptides indicating that the micro-environment of the binding site is more hydrophobic for the non-peptide antagonist than for the peptide agonists. Comparison of collisional quenching of fluorescence by the water-soluble hydroxy-Tempo compound showed that dansyl-CP96,345 is buried and virtually inaccessible to aqueous quenchers, whereas dansyl- or fluoresceinyl-labeled peptides were exposed to the solvent. Anisotropy of all fluorescent ligands increased upon binding to NK1 indicating a restricted motional freedom. However, this increase in anisotropy was more pronounced for the dansyl attached to the non-peptide antagonist CP96,345 than for the fluorescent probes attached to different positions of SP. In conclusion, our data indicate that the environment surrounding non-peptide antagonist and peptide agonists are vastly different when bound to the NK1 receptor. These results support recent observations by mutagenesis and cross-linking work suggesting that peptide agonists have their major interaction points in the N-terminal extension and the loops forming the extracellular face of the NK1 receptor. Our data also suggest that neither the C terminus nor the N terminus of SP appears to penetrate deeply below the extracellular surface in the transmembrane domain of the receptor.


Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening | 2014

Digital holographic microscopy: a quantitative label-free microscopy technique for phenotypic screening

Benjamin Rappaz; Billy Breton; Etienne Shaffer; Gerardo Turcatti

Digital Holographic Microscopy (DHM) is a label-free imaging technique allowing visualization of transparent cells with classical imaging cell culture plates. The quantitative DHM phase contrast image provided is related both to the intracellular refractive index and to cell thickness. DHM is able to distinguish cellular morphological changes on two representative cell lines (HeLa and H9c2) when treated with doxorubicin and chloroquine, two cytotoxic compounds yielding distinct phenotypes. We analyzed parameters linked to cell morphology and to the intracellular content in endpoint measurements and further investigated them with timelapse recording. The results obtained by DHM were compared with other optical label-free microscopy techniques, namely Phase Contrast, Differential Interference Contrast and Transport of Intensity Equation (reconstructed from three bright-field images). For comparative purposes, images were acquired in a common 96-well plate format on the different motorized microscopes. In contrast to the other microscopies assayed, images generated with DHM can be easily quantified using a simple automatized on-the-fly analysis method for discriminating the different phenotypes generated in each cell line. The DHM technology is suitable for the development of robust and unbiased image-based assays.


Nature Methods | 2007

Low- to high-throughput analysis of telomerase modulators with Telospot

Gaël Cristofari; Patrick Reichenbach; Pierre-Olivier Regamey; Damiano Banfi; Marc Chambon; Gerardo Turcatti; Joachim Lingner

We designed a method termed Telospot to discover and characterize telomerase modulators as anticancer drugs or chemical biology tools. Telospot is based on a highly efficient human telomerase expression system and the detection of telomerase DNA reaction products in macroarray format. Telospot offers a highly scalable, cost- and time-effective alternative to presently available telomerase assays, which are limited by the requirement for PCR, telomerase purification or technologies not amenable to high throughput.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Detailed analysis and follow-up studies of a high-throughput screening for indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) inhibitors

Ute F. Röhrig; Somi Reddy Majjigapu; Marc Chambon; Sylvian Bron; Luc Pilotte; Didier Colau; Benoît Van den Eynde; Gerardo Turcatti; Pierre Vogel; Vincent Zoete; Olivier Michielin

Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1) is a key regulator of immune responses and therefore an important therapeutic target for the treatment of diseases that involve pathological immune escape, such as cancer. Here, we describe a robust and sensitive high-throughput screen (HTS) for IDO1 inhibitors using the Prestwick Chemical Library of 1200 FDA-approved drugs and the Maybridge HitFinder Collection of 14,000 small molecules. Of the 60 hits selected for follow-up studies, 14 displayed IC50 values below 20 μM under the secondary assay conditions, and 4 showed an activity in cellular tests. In view of the high attrition rate we used both experimental and computational techniques to identify and to characterize compounds inhibiting IDO1 through unspecific inhibition mechanisms such as chemical reactivity, redox cycling, or aggregation. One specific IDO1 inhibitor scaffold, the imidazole antifungal agents, was chosen for rational structure-based lead optimization, which led to more soluble and smaller compounds with micromolar activity.


FEBS Letters | 1991

Human interleukin‐5 expressed in Escherichia coli: assignment of the disulfide bridges of the purified unglycosylated protein

Amanda E. I. Proudfoot; J.Gwynfor Davies; Gerardo Turcatti; Paul T. Wingfield

Human interleukin‐5 is a homodimer: each subunit contains two cysteine residues that form two inter‐subunit disulfide bonds. The topology of the disulfides in recombinant human interleukin‐5 produced in Escherichia coli was studied by proteolytic digestion and peptide mapping. Disulfide linked peptides containing cysteine 42 linked to cysteine 84 were isolated. This indicated that cysteine 42 and 84 of one subunit were linked in an antiparallel manner to cysteines 84 and 42 of the other subunit.


Optics Express | 2015

Automated multi-parameter measurement of cardiomyocytes dynamics with digital holographic microscopy

Benjamin Rappaz; Inkyu Moon; Faliu Yi; Bahram Javidi; Pierre Marquet; Gerardo Turcatti

Compounds tested during drug development may have adverse effects on the heart; therefore all new chemical entities have to undergo extensive preclinical assessment for cardiac liability. Conventional intensity-based imaging techniques are not robust enough to provide detailed information for cell structure and the captured images result in low-contrast, especially to cell with semi-transparent or transparent feature, which would affect the cell analysis. In this paper we show, for the first time, that digital holographic microscopy (DHM) integrated with information processing algorithms automatically provide dynamic quantitative phase profiles of beating cardiomyocytes. We experimentally demonstrate that relevant parameters of cardiomyocytes can be obtained by our automated algorithm based on DHM phase signal analysis and used to characterize the physiological state of resting cardiomyocytes. Our study opens the possibility of automated quantitative analysis of cardiomyocyte dynamics suitable for further drug safety testing and compounds selection as a new paradigm in drug toxicity screens.

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Anthony Romieu

Institut Universitaire de France

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Benjamin Rappaz

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Marc Chambon

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Keith Rose

Carnegie Mellon University

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Paul T. Wingfield

National Institutes of Health

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