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Featured researches published by Guillaume Lenoir.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Overproduction in yeast and rapid and efficient purification of the rabbit SERCA1a Ca2+-ATPase

Guillaume Lenoir; Thierry Menguy; Fabienne Corre; Cédric Montigny; Per Amstrup Pedersen; Denyse Thinès; Marc Lemaire; Perre Falson

Large amounts of heterologous C-terminally his-tagged SERCA1a Ca(2+)-ATPase were expressed in yeast using a galactose-regulated promoter and purified by Ni(2+) affinity chromatography followed by Reactive red chromatography. Optimizing the number of galactose inductions and increasing the amount of Gal4p transcription factor improved expression. Lowering the temperature from 28 degrees C to 18 degrees C during expression enhanced the recovery of solubilized and active Ca(2+)-ATPase. In these conditions, a 4 l yeast culture produced 100 mg of Ca(2+)-ATPase, 60 and 22 mg being pelleted with the heavy and light membrane fractions respectively, representing 7 and 1.7% of total proteins. The Ca(2+)-ATPase expressed in light membranes was 100% solubilized with L-alpha-lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), 50% with n-dodecyl beta-D-maltoside (DM) and 25% with octaethylene glycol mono-n-dodecyl ether (C(12)E(8)). Compared to LPC, DM preserved specific activity of the solubilized Ca(2+)-ATPase during the chromatographic steps. Starting from 1/6 (3.8 mg) of the total amount of Ca(2+)-ATPase expressed in light membranes, 800 microg could be routinely purified to 50% purity by metal affinity chromatography and then 200 microg to 70% with Reactive red chromatography. The purified Ca(2+)-ATPase displayed the same K(m) for calcium and ATP as the native enzyme but a reduced specific activity ranging from 4.5 to 7.3 micromol ATP hydrolyzed/min/mg Ca(2+)-ATPase. It was stable and active for several days at 4 degrees C or after removal of DM with Bio-beads and storage at -80 degrees C.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

CDC50 proteins are critical components of the human class-1 P4-ATPase transport machinery

Susanne Bryde; Hanka Hennrich; Patricia M. Verhulst; Philippe F. Devaux; Guillaume Lenoir; Joost C. M. Holthuis

Members of the P4 subfamily of P-type ATPases catalyze phospholipid transport and create membrane lipid asymmetry in late secretory and endocytic compartments. P-type ATPases usually pump small cations and the transport mechanism involved appears conserved throughout the family. How this mechanism is adapted to flip phospholipids remains to be established. P4-ATPases form heteromeric complexes with CDC50 proteins. Dissociation of the yeast P4-ATPase Drs2p from its binding partner Cdc50p disrupts catalytic activity (Lenoir, G., Williamson, P., Puts, C. F., and Holthuis, J. C. (2009) J. Biol. Chem. 284, 17956–17967), suggesting that CDC50 subunits play an intimate role in the mechanism of transport by P4-ATPases. The human genome encodes 14 P4-ATPases while only three human CDC50 homologues have been identified. This implies that each human CDC50 protein interacts with multiple P4-ATPases or, alternatively, that some human P4-ATPases function without a CDC50 binding partner. Here we show that human CDC50 proteins each bind multiple class-1 P4-ATPases, and that in all cases examined, association with a CDC50 subunit is required for P4-ATPase export from the ER. Moreover, we find that phosphorylation of the catalytically important Asp residue in human P4-ATPases ATP8B1 and ATP8B2 is critically dependent on their CDC50 subunit. These results indicate that CDC50 proteins are integral part of the P4-ATPase flippase machinery.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Phosphatidylserine Stimulation of Drs2p·Cdc50p Lipid Translocase Dephosphorylation Is Controlled by Phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate

Aurore Jacquot; Cédric Montigny; Hanka Hennrich; Raphaëlle Barry; Marc le Maire; Christine Jaxel; Joost C. M. Holthuis; Philippe Champeil; Guillaume Lenoir

Background: Transport of phosphatidylserine (PS) analogs by the Drs2p flippase is regulated by PtdIns(4)P. Results: PS stimulates dephosphorylation of the Drs2p·Cdc50p complex only in the presence of PtdIns(4)P. Conclusion: The step at which PtdIns(4)P regulates lipid transport is identified. Significance: Our coordinated overexpression system provides mechanistic insight into PS transport and will be useful for further Drs2p characterization and crystallization. Here, Drs2p, a yeast lipid translocase that belongs to the family of P4-type ATPases, was overexpressed in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae together with Cdc50p, its glycosylated partner, as a result of the design of a novel co-expression vector. The resulting high yield allowed us, using crude membranes or detergent-solubilized membranes, to measure the formation from [γ-32P]ATP of a 32P-labeled transient phosphoenzyme at the catalytic site of Drs2p. Formation of this phosphoenzyme could be detected only if Cdc50p was co-expressed with Drs2p but was not dependent on full glycosylation of Cdc50p. It was inhibited by orthovanadate and fluoride compounds. In crude membranes, the phosphoenzyme formed at steady state at 4 °C displayed ADP-insensitive but temperature-sensitive decay. Solubilizing concentrations of dodecyl maltoside left this decay rate almost unaltered, whereas several other detergents accelerated it. Unexpectedly, the dephosphorylation rate for the solubilized Drs2p·Cdc50p complex was inhibited by the addition of phosphatidylserine. Phosphatidylserine exerted its anticipated accelerating effect on the dephosphorylation of Drs2p·Cdc50p complex only in the additional presence of phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate. These results explain why phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate tightly controls Drs2p-catalyzed lipid transport and establish the functional relevance of the Drs2p·Cdc50p complex overexpressed here.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A high-yield co-expression system for the purification of an intact Drs2p-Cdc50p lipid flippase complex, critically dependent on and stabilized by phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate

Hassina Azouaoui; Cédric Montigny; Miriam-Rose Ash; Frank Fijalkowski; Aurore Jacquot; Christina Grønberg; Rosa L. López-Marqués; Michael G. Palmgren; Manuel Garrigos; Marc le Maire; Paulette Decottignies; Pontus Gourdon; Poul Nissen; Philippe Champeil; Guillaume Lenoir

P-type ATPases from the P4 subfamily (P4-ATPases) are energy-dependent transporters, which are thought to establish lipid asymmetry in eukaryotic cell membranes. Together with their Cdc50 accessory subunits, P4-ATPases couple ATP hydrolysis to lipid transport from the exoplasmic to the cytoplasmic leaflet of plasma membranes, late Golgi membranes, and endosomes. To gain insights into the structure and function of these important membrane pumps, robust protocols for expression and purification are required. In this report, we present a procedure for high-yield co-expression of a yeast flippase, the Drs2p-Cdc50p complex. After recovery of yeast membranes expressing both proteins, efficient purification was achieved in a single step by affinity chromatography on streptavidin beads, yielding ∼1–2 mg purified Drs2p-Cdc50p complex per liter of culture. Importantly, the procedure enabled us to recover a fraction that mainly contained a 1∶1 complex, which was assessed by size-exclusion chromatography and mass spectrometry. The functional properties of the purified complex were examined, including the dependence of its catalytic cycle on specific lipids. The dephosphorylation rate was stimulated in the simultaneous presence of the transported substrate, phosphatidylserine (PS), and the regulatory lipid phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P), a phosphoinositide that plays critical roles in membrane trafficking events from the trans-Golgi network (TGN). Likewise, overall ATP hydrolysis by the complex was critically dependent on the simultaneous presence of PI4P and PS. We also identified a prominent role for PI4P in stabilization of the Drs2p-Cdc50p complex towards temperature- or C12E8-induced irreversible inactivation. These results indicate that the Drs2p-Cdc50p complex remains functional after affinity purification and that PI4P as a cofactor tightly controls its stability and catalytic activity. This work offers appealing perspectives for detailed structural and functional characterization of the Drs2p-Cdc50p lipid transport mechanism.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2016

A robust method to screen detergents for membrane protein stabilization, revisited

Philippe Champeil; Stéphane Orlowski; Simon Babin; Sten Lund; Marc le Maire; Jesper Møller; Guillaume Lenoir; Cédric Montigny

This report is a follow up of our previous paper (Lund, Orlowski, de Foresta, Champeil, le Maire and Møller (1989), J Biol Chem 264:4907-4915) showing that solubilization in detergent of a membrane protein may interfere with its long-term stability, and proposing a protocol to reveal the kinetics of such irreversible inactivation. We here clarify the fact that when various detergents are tested for their effects, special attention has of course to be paid to their critical micelle concentration. We also investigate the effects of a few more detergents, some of which have been recently advertised in the literature, and emphasize the role of lipids together with detergents. Among these detergents, lauryl maltose neopentyl glycol (LMNG) exerts a remarkable ability, even higher than that of β-dodecylmaltoside (DDM), to protect our test enzyme, the paradigmatic P-type ATPase SERCA1a from sarcoplasmic reticulum. Performing such experiments for ones favourite protein probably remains useful in pre-screening assays testing various detergents.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2003

Proteolytic Studies on the Transduction Mechanism of Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+-ATPase

Jesper V. Møller; Guillaume Lenoir; Marc le Maire; Birte Juul; Philippe Champeil

Abstract: After proteinase K‐induced excision of five amino acid residues in the semiconserved polypeptide chain linking the end of the A domain with the S3/M3 transmembrane segment we find that Ca2+ transport is blocked while partial reactions like Ca2+ binding, ATP phosphorylation, and Ca2+‐occlusion are left intact. However, formation of the so‐called E2P state (either from the phosphorylated species formed in the presence of ATP and Ca2+ or from the Ca2+‐depleted unphosphorylated species) is blocked. We conclude that the proteinase K‐treated ATPase, while maintaining many of the partial reactions, is incapable of energy transduction because of the absence of an E2P state with Ca2+ binding sites exposed to the intravesicular space. Sequence comparisons and mutagenesis data point to an important role in energy transduction of P‐type ATPases of a conserved motif located at the end of the A domain.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2017

High phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P)-dependent ATPase activity for the Drs2p-Cdc50p flippase after removal of its N- and C-terminal extensions

Hassina Azouaoui; Cédric Montigny; Thibaud Dieudonné; Philippe Champeil; Aurore Jacquot; José Luis Vázquez-Ibar; Pierre Le Maréchal; Jakob Ulstrup; Miriam-Rose Ash; Joseph A. Lyons; Poul Nissen; Guillaume Lenoir

P4-ATPases, also known as phospholipid flippases, are responsible for creating and maintaining transbilayer lipid asymmetry in eukaryotic cell membranes. Here, we use limited proteolysis to investigate the role of the N and C termini in ATP hydrolysis and auto-inhibition of the yeast flippase Drs2p-Cdc50p. We show that limited proteolysis of the detergent-solubilized and purified yeast flippase may result in more than 1 order of magnitude increase of its ATPase activity, which remains dependent on phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P), a regulator of this lipid flippase, and specific to a phosphatidylserine substrate. Using thrombin as the protease, Cdc50p remains intact and in complex with Drs2p, which is cleaved at two positions, namely after Arg104 and after Arg 1290, resulting in a homogeneous sample lacking 104 and 65 residues from its N and C termini, respectively. Removal of the 1291–1302-amino acid region of the C-terminal extension is critical for relieving the auto-inhibition of full-length Drs2p, whereas the 1–104 N-terminal residues have an additional but more modest significance for activity. The present results therefore reveal that trimming off appropriate regions of the terminal extensions of Drs2p can greatly increase its ATPase activity in the presence of PI4P and demonstrate that relief of such auto-inhibition remains compatible with subsequent regulation by PI4P. These experiments suggest that activation of the Drs2p-Cdc50p flippase follows a multistep mechanism, with preliminary release of a number of constraints, possibly through the binding of regulatory proteins in the trans-Golgi network, followed by full activation by PI4P.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Slow Phospholipid Exchange between a Detergent-Solubilized Membrane Protein and Lipid-Detergent Mixed Micelles: Brominated Phospholipids as Tools to Follow Its Kinetics

Cédric Montigny; Thibaud Dieudonné; Stéphane Orlowski; José Luis Vázquez-Ibar; Carole Gauron; Dominique Georgin; Sten Lund; Marc le Maire; Jesper V. Møller; Philippe Champeil; Guillaume Lenoir

Membrane proteins are largely dependent for their function on the phospholipids present in their immediate environment, and when they are solubilized by detergent for further study, residual phospholipids are critical, too. Here, brominated phosphatidylcholine, a phospholipid which behaves as an unsaturated phosphatidylcholine, was used to reveal the kinetics of phospholipid exchange or transfer from detergent mixed micelles to the environment of a detergent-solubilized membrane protein, the paradigmatic P-type ATPase SERCA1a, in which Trp residues can experience fluorescence quenching by bromine atoms present on phospholipid alkyl chains in their immediate environment. Using dodecylmaltoside as the detergent, exchange of (brominated) phospholipid was found to be much slower than exchange of detergent under the same conditions, and also much slower than membrane solubilization, the latter being evidenced by light scattering changes. The kinetics of this exchange was strongly dependent on temperature. It was also dependent on the total concentration of the mixed micelles, revealing the major role for such exchange of the collision of detergent micelles with the detergent-solubilized protein. Back-transfer of the brominated phospholipid from the solubilized protein to the detergent micelle was much faster if lipid-free DDM micelles instead of mixed micelles were added for triggering dissociation of brominated phosphatidylcholine from the solubilized protein, or in the additional presence of C12E8 detergent during exchange, also emphasizing the role of the chemical nature of the micelle/protein interface. This protocol using brominated lipids appears to be valuable for revealing the possibly slow kinetics of phospholipid transfer to or from detergent-solubilized membrane proteins. Independently, continuous recording of the activity of the protein can also be used in some cases to correlate changes in activity with the exchange of a specific phospholipid, as shown here by using the Drs2p/Cdc50p complex, a lipid flippase with specific binding sites for lipids.


Current protocols in protein science | 2018

Screening of Detergents for Stabilization of Functional Membrane Proteins

Guillaume Lenoir; Thibaud Dieudonné; Anaïs Lamy; Maylis Lejeune; José‐Luis Vazquez‐Ibar; Cédric Montigny

Membrane protein studies usually require use of detergents to extract and isolate proteins from membranes and manipulate them in a soluble context for their functional or structural characterization. However, solubilization with detergent may interfere with MP stability and may directly affect MP function or structure. Moreover, detergent properties can be affected such as critical micellar concentration (CMC) can be affected by the experimental conditions. Consequently, the experimenter must pay attention to both the protein and the behavior of the detergent. This article provides a convenient protocol for estimating the CMC of detergents in given experimental conditions. Then, it presents two protocols aimed at monitoring the function of a membrane protein in the presence of detergent. Such experiments may help to test various detergents for their inactivating or stabilizing effects on long incubation times, ranging from few hours to some days.


Biophysical Journal | 2004

A New Method for the Reconstitution of Membrane Proteins into Giant Unilamellar Vesicles

Philippe Girard; Jacques Pecreaux; Guillaume Lenoir; Pierre Falson; Jean-Louis Rigaud; Patricia Bassereau

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Philippe Champeil

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Pierre Falson

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Aurore Jacquot

Université Paris-Saclay

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Martin Picard

Paris Descartes University

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