Gregory Upert
French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission
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Featured researches published by Gregory Upert.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Markus Wiesner; Gregory Upert; Gaetano Angelici; Helma Wennemers
Kinetic studies on enamine catalysis provided insight into the rate determining step(s) of peptide catalyzed conjugate addition reactions between aldehydes and nitroolefins. They demonstrate that not enamine formation but both the reaction of the enamine with the electrophile and hydrolysis of the resulting imine are rate limiting. These results allowed for reducing the catalyst loading by a factor of 10 to as little as 0.1 mol %. This is the lowest catalyst loading that has been achieved so far in enamine catalysis with low molecular weight catalysts for a broad range of substrates.
Angewandte Chemie | 2009
Kirsten Belser; Tünde Vig Slenters; Conelious Pfumbidzai; Gregory Upert; Laurent Mirolo; Katharina M. Fromm; Helma Wennemers
Split-and-mix libraries are an excellent tool for the identification of peptides that induce the formation of Ag nanoparticles in the presence of either light or sodium ascorbate to reduce Ag(+) ions. Structurally diverse peptides were detected in colorimetric on-bead screenings that generate Ag nanoparticles of different sizes, as confirmed by SEM and X-ray powder diffraction studies.
Metallomics | 2014
Narasimha Rao Uda; Gregory Upert; Gaetano Angelici; Stefan Nicolet; Tobias Schmidt; Torsten Schwede; Marc Creus
The development of resistance to virtually all current antibiotics makes the discovery of new antimicrobial compounds with novel protein targets an urgent challenge. The dapE-encoded N-succinyl-L,L-diaminopimelic acid desuccinylase (DapE) is an essential metallo-enzyme for growth and proliferation in many bacteria, acting in the desuccinylation of N-succinyl-L,L-diaminopimelic acid (SDAP) in a late stage of the anabolic pathway towards both lysine and a crucial building block of the peptidoglycan cell wall. L-Captopril, which has been shown to exhibit very promising inhibitory activity in vitro against DapE and has attractive drug-like properties, nevertheless does not target DapE in bacteria effectively. Here we show that L-captopril targets only the Zn(2+)-metallo-isoform of the enzyme, whereas the Mn(2+)-enzyme, which is also a physiologically relevant isoform in bacteria, is not inhibited. Our finding provides a rationale for the failure of this promising lead-compound to exhibit any significant antibiotic activity in bacteria and underlines the importance of addressing metallo-isoform heterogeneity in future drug design. Moreover, to our knowledge, this is the first example of metallo-isoform heterogeneity in vivo that provides an evolutionary advantage to bacteria upon drug-challenge.
Analytical Chemistry | 2015
Philippe Massonnet; Gregory Upert; Nicolas Smargiasso; Nicolas Gilles; Loïc Quinton; Edwin De Pauw
Disulfide bonds are post-translational modifications (PTMs) often found in peptides and proteins. They increase their stability toward enzymatic degradations and provide the structure and (consequently) the activity of such folded proteins. The characterization of disulfide patterns, i.e., the cysteine connectivity, is crucial to achieve a global picture of the active conformation of the protein of interest. Electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) constitutes a valuable tool to cleave the disulfide bonds in the gas phase, avoiding chemical reduction/alkylation in solution. To characterize the cysteine pairing, the present work proposes (i) to reduce by ETD one of the two disulfide bridges of model peptides, resulting in the opening of the cyclic structures, (ii) to separate the generated species by ion mobility, and (iii) to characterize the species using collision-induced dissociation (CID). Results of this strategy applied to several peptides show different behaviors depending on the connectivity. The loss of SH· radical species, observed for all the peptides, confirms the cleavage of the disulfides during the ETD process.
Toxicon | 2013
Guillaume Blanchet; Gregory Upert; Gilles Mourier; Bernard Gilquin; Nicolas Gilles; Denis Servent
Despite their isolation more than fifteen years ago from the venom of the African mamba Dendroaspis polylepis, very few data are known on the functional activity of MTβ and CM-3 toxins. MTβ was initially classified as a muscarinic toxin interacting non-selectively and with low affinity with the five muscarinic receptor subtypes while no biological function was determined for CM-3. Recent results highlight the multifunctional activity of three-finger fold toxins for muscarinic and adrenergic receptors and reveal some discrepancies in the pharmacological profiles of their venom-purified and synthetic forms. Here, we report the pharmacological characterization of chemically-synthesized MTβ and CM-3 toxins on nine subtypes of muscarinic and adrenergic receptors and demonstrate their high potency for α-adrenoceptors and in particular a sub-nanomolar affinity for the α1A-subtype. Strikingly, no or very weak affinity were found for muscarinic receptors, highlighting that pharmacological characterizations of venom-purified peptides may be risky due to possible contaminations. The biological profile of these two homologous toxins looks like that one previously reported for the Dendroaspis angusticeps ρ-Da1a toxin. Nevertheless, MTβ and CM-3 interact more potently than ρ-Da1a with α1B- and α1D-AR subtypes. A computational analysis of the stability of the MTβ structure suggests that mutation S38I, could be involved in this gain in function.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2016
Philippe Massonnet; Jean Haler; Gregory Upert; Michel Degueldre; Denis Morsa; Nicolas Smargiasso; Gilles Mourier; Nicolas Gilles; Loïc Quinton; Edwin De Pauw
AbstractDisulfide bonds are post-translationnal modifications that can be crucial for the stability and the biological activities of natural peptides. Considering the importance of these disulfide bond-containing peptides, the development of new techniques in order to characterize these modifications is of great interest. For this purpose, collision cross cections (CCS) of a large data set of 118 peptides (displaying various sequences) bearing zero, one, two, or three disulfide bond(s) have been measured in this study at different charge states using ion mobility-mass spectrometry. From an experimental point of view, CCS differences (ΔCCS) between peptides bearing various numbers of disulfide bonds and peptides having no disulfide bonds have been calculated. The ΔCCS calculations have also been applied to peptides bearing two disulfide bonds but different cysteine connectivities (Cys1-Cys2/Cys3-Cys4; Cys1-Cys3/Cys2-Cys4; Cys1-Cys4/Cys2-Cys3). The effect of the replacement of a proton by a potassium adduct on a peptidic structure has also been investigated. Graphical Abstractᅟ
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2018
Philippe Massonnet; Jean Haler; Gregory Upert; Nicolas Smargiasso; Gilles Mourier; Nicolas Gilles; Loïc Quinton; Edwin De Pauw
AbstractDisulfide connectivity in peptides bearing at least two intramolecular disulfide bonds is highly important for the structure and the biological activity of the peptides. In that context, analytical strategies allowing a characterization of the cysteine pairing are of prime interest for chemists, biochemists, and biologists. For that purpose, this study evaluates the potential of MALDI in-source decay (ISD) for characterizing cysteine pairs through the systematic analysis of identical peptides bearing two disulfide bonds, but not the same cysteine connectivity. Three different matrices have been tested in positive and/or in negative mode (1,5-DAN, 2-AB and 2-AA). As MALDI-ISD is known to partially reduce disulfide bonds, the data analysis of this study rests firstly on the deconvolution of the isotope pattern of the parent ions. Moreover, data analysis is also based on the formed fragment ions and their signal intensities. Results from MS/MS-experiments (MALDI-ISD-MS/MS) constitute the last reference for data interpretation. Owing to the combined use of different ISD-promoting matrices, cysteine connectivity identification could be performed on the considered peptides. Graphical Abstractᅟ
Angewandte Chemie | 2012
Gregory Upert; Francelin Bouillère; Helma Wennemers
Journal of Proteomics | 2013
Camila Takeno Cologna; Jaqueline dos Santos Cardoso; Emmanuel Jourdan; Michel Degueldre; Gregory Upert; Nicolas Gilles; Ana Paula Trovatti Uetanabaro; Eraldo Medeiro Costa Neto; Philippe Thonart; Edwin De Pauw; Loïc Quinton
Chemical Communications | 2010
Gregory Upert; Christoph A. Merten; Helma Wennemers