Gianluca Santoni
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Gianluca Santoni.
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2013
Eugénie Carletti; Jacques Philippe Colletier; Lawrence M. Schopfer; Gianluca Santoni; Patrick Masson; Oksana Lockridge; Florian Nachon; Martin Weik
Tri-o-cresyl-phosphate (TOCP) is a common additive in jet engine lubricants and hydraulic fluids suspected to have a role in aerotoxic syndrome in humans. TOCP is metabolized to cresyl saligenin phosphate (CBDP), a potent irreversible inhibitor of butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), a natural bioscavenger present in the bloodstream, and acetylcholinesterase (AChE), the off-switch at cholinergic synapses. Mechanistic details of cholinesterase (ChE) inhibition have, however, remained elusive. Also, the inhibition of AChE by CBDP is unexpected, from a structural standpoint, i.e., considering the narrowness of AChE active site and the bulkiness of CBDP. In the following, we report on kinetic X-ray crystallography experiments that provided 2.7-3.3 Å snapshots of the reaction of CBDP with mouse AChE and human BChE. The series of crystallographic snapshots reveals that AChE and BChE react with the opposite enantiomers and that an induced-fit rearrangement of Phe297 enlarges the active site of AChE upon CBDP binding. Mass spectrometry analysis of aging in either H(2)(16)O or H(2)(18)O furthermore allowed us to identify the inhibition steps, in which water molecules are involved, thus providing insights into the mechanistic details of inhibition. X-ray crystallography and mass spectrometry show the formation of an aged end product formed in both AChE and BChE that cannot be reactivated by current oxime-based therapeutics. Our study thus shows that only prophylactic and symptomatic treatments are viable to counter the inhibition of AChE and BChE by CBDP.
Molecules | 2017
Xavier Brazzolotto; Alexandre Igert; Virginia Guillon; Gianluca Santoni; Florian Nachon
Human butyrylcholinesterase is a performant stoichiometric bioscavenger of organophosphorous nerve agents. It is either isolated from outdated plasma or functionally expressed in eukaryotic systems. Here, we report the production of active human butyrylcholinesterase in a prokaryotic system after optimization of the primary sequence through the Protein Repair One Stop Shop process, a structure- and sequence-based algorithm for soluble bacterial expression of difficult eukaryotic proteins. The mutant enzyme was purified to homogeneity. Its kinetic parameters with substrate are similar to the endogenous human butyrylcholinesterase or recombinants produced in eukaryotic systems. The isolated protein was prone to crystallize and its 2.5-Å X-ray structure revealed an active site gorge region identical to that of previously solved structures. The advantages of this alternate expression system, particularly for the generation of butyrylcholinesterase variants with nerve agent hydrolysis activity, are discussed.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018
Gianluca Santoni; J. de Sousa; E. De la Mora; José Dias; Ludovic Jean; Joel L. Sussman; Israel Silman; Pierre-Yves Renard; Richard C. D. Brown; Martin Weik; Rachid Baati; Florian Nachon
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE), a key enzyme in the central and peripheral nervous systems, is the principal target of organophosphorus nerve agents. Quaternary oximes can regenerate AChE activity by displacing the phosphyl group of the nerve agent from the active site, but they are poorly distributed in the central nervous system. A promising reactivator based on tetrahydroacridine linked to a nonquaternary oxime is also an undesired submicromolar reversible inhibitor of AChE. X-ray structures and molecular docking indicate that structural modification of the tetrahydroacridine might decrease inhibition without affecting reactivation. The chlorinated derivative was synthesized and, in line with the prediction, displayed a 10-fold decrease in inhibition but no significant decrease in reactivation efficiency. X-ray structures with the derivative rationalize this outcome. We thus show that rational design based on structural studies permits the refinement of new-generation pyridine aldoxime reactivators that may be more effective in the treatment of nerve agent intoxication.
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014
Maria Kliachyna; Gianluca Santoni; Valentin Nussbaum; Julien Renou; Benoit Sanson; Jacques-Philippe Colletier; Mélanie Arboléas; Mélanie Loiodice; Martin Weik; Ludovic Jean; Pierre-Yves Renard; Florian Nachon; Rachid Baati
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2014
Emilia Oueis; Gianluca Santoni; Cyril Ronco; Olga A. Syzgantseva; Vincent Tognetti; Laurent Joubert; Anthony Romieu; Martin Weik; Ludovic Jean; Cyrille Sabot; Florian Nachon; Pierre-Yves Renard
Archive | 2015
Rachid Baati; Maria Kliachyna; Valentin Nussbaum; Pierre-Yves Renard; Ludovic Jean; Martin Weik; Florian Nachon; Mélanie Touvrey; Mélanie Friedel; Julien Renou; Tristan Verdelet; Guillaume Mercey; Jacques-Philippe Colletier; Benoît Sanson; Gianluca Santoni
Archive | 2018
Gianluca Santoni; E. De la Mora; J. de Souza; Israel Silman; Joel L. Sussman; Rachid Baati; Martin Weik; Florian Nachon
Archive | 2018
Gianluca Santoni; E. De la Mora; J. de Souza; Israel Silman; Joel L. Sussman; Rachid Baati; Martin Weik; Florian Nachon
Archive | 2018
E. De la Mora; Gianluca Santoni; J. de Souza; Joel L. Sussman; Israel Silman; Rachid Baati; Martin Weik; Florian Nachon
Archive | 2018
Gianluca Santoni; E. De la Mora; J. de Souza; Israel Silman; Joel L. Sussman; Rachid Baati; Martin Weik; Florian Nachon