Hervé Meudal
University of Orléans
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Hervé Meudal.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009
Chrystelle Derache; Valérie Labas; Vincent Aucagne; Hervé Meudal; Céline Landon; Agnès F. Delmas; Thierry Magallon; Anne-Christine Lalmanach
ABSTRACT Three biologically active β-defensins were purified by chromatography from chicken bone marrow extract: avian β-defensin 1 (AvBD1), AvBD2, and the newly isolated β-defensin AvBD7. Mass spectrometry analyses showed that bone marrow-derived AvBD1, -2, and -7 peptides were present as mature peptides and revealed posttranslational modifications for AvBD1 and AvBD7 in comparison to their in silico-predicted amino acid sequences. Tandem mass spectrometry analysis using the nanoelectrospray-quadrupole time of flight method showed N-terminal glutaminyl cyclization of mature AvBD7 and C-terminal amidation of mature AvBD1 peptide, while posttranslational modifications were absent in bone marrow-derived mature AvBD2 peptide. Furthermore, mass spectrometry analysis performed on intact cells confirmed the presence of these three peptides in mature heterophils. In addition, the antibacterial activities of the three β-defensins against a large panel of gram-positive and -negative bacteria were assessed. While the three defensins displayed similar antibacterial spectra of activity against gram-positive strains, AvBD1 and AvBD7 exhibited the strongest activity against gram-negative strains in comparison to AvBD2.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Chrystelle Derache; Hervé Meudal; Vincent Aucagne; Kevin J. Mark; Martine Cadene; Agnès F. Delmas; Anne-Christine Lalmanach; Céline Landon
Background: Avian defensins are antimicrobial peptides of a birds immunity. Results: The target of chicken AvBD2 defensin is not chiral. Its structure is not amphipathic. The reduced and AvBD2-K31A forms dramatically decrease antibacterial activity. Conclusion: AvBD2 may disrupt the bacterial membrane through a nonchiral, nonspecific interaction. Significance: Knowledge of the structure-function relationships of avian defensins is a prerequisite for their use as alternatives to antibiotics. Numerous β-defensins have been identified in birds, and the potential use of these peptides as alternatives to antibiotics has been proposed, in particular to fight antibiotic-resistant and zoonotic bacterial species. Little is known about the mechanism of antibacterial activity of avian β-defensins, and this study was carried out to obtain initial insights into the involvement of structural features or specific residues in the antimicrobial activity of chicken AvBD2. Chicken AvBD2 and its enantiomeric counterpart were chemically synthesized. Peptide elongation and oxidative folding were both optimized. The similar antimicrobial activity measured for both l- and d-proteins clearly indicates that there is no chiral partner. Therefore, the bacterial membrane is in all likelihood the primary target. Moreover, this work indicates that the three-dimensional fold is required for an optimal antimicrobial activity, in particular for Gram-positive bacterial strains. The three-dimensional NMR structure of chicken AvBD2 defensin displays the structural three-stranded antiparallel β-sheet characteristic of β-defensins. The surface of the molecule does not display any amphipathic character. In light of this new structure and of the king penguin AvBD103b defensin structure, the consensus sequence of the avian β-defensin family was analyzed. Well conserved residues were highlighted, and the potential strategic role of the lysine 31 residue of AvBD2 was emphasized. The synthetic AvBD2-K31A variant displayed substantial N-terminal structural modifications and a dramatic decrease in activity. Taken together, these results demonstrate the structural as well as the functional role of the critical lysine 31 residue in antimicrobial activity.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Pedro Da Silva; Isabelle Rahioui; Christian Laugier; Laurence Jouvensal; Hervé Meudal; Christophe Chouabe; Agnès F. Delmas; Frédéric Gressent
PA1b (pea albumin 1, subunit b) is a small and compact 37-amino acid protein, isolated from pea seeds (Pisum sativum), that adopts a cystine knot fold. It acts as a potent insecticidal agent against major pests in stored crops and vegetables, making it a promising bioinsecticide. Here, we investigate the influence of individual residues on the structure and bioactivity of PA1b. A collection of 13 PA1b mutants was successfully chemically synthesized in which the residues involved in the definition of PA1b amphiphilic and electrostatic characteristics were individually replaced with an alanine. The three-dimensional structure of PA1b was outstandingly tolerant of modifications. Remarkably, receptor binding and insecticidal activities were both dependent on common well defined clusters of residues located on one single face of the toxin, with Phe-10, Arg-21, Ile-23, and Leu-27 being key residues of the binding interaction. The inactivity of the mutants is clearly due to a change in the nature of the side chain rather than to a side effect, such as misfolding or degradation of the peptide, in the insect digestive tract. We have shown that a hydrophobic patch is the putative site of the interaction of PA1b with its binding site. Overall, the mutagenesis data provide major insights into the functional elements responsible for PA1b entomotoxic properties and give some clues toward a better understanding of the PA1b mode of action.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Virginie Hervé; Hervé Meudal; Valérie Labas; Sophie Réhault-Godbert; Joël Gautron; Magali Berges; Nicolas Guyot; Agnès F. Delmas; Yves Nys; Céline Landon
Background: Ovodefensins are small peptides from eggs, related to avian antimicrobial defensins. Results: The first three-dimensional structure of ovodefensins (gallin) is solved, and its antimicrobial properties are screened. Conclusion: Gallin adopts a β-defensin fold, with significant variations. Its antibacterial spectrum was restricted to E. coli. Significance: The first structural features may be related to E. coli specificity and/or other yet unknown functions. Gallin is a 41-residue protein, first identified as a minor component of hen egg white and found to be antimicrobial against Escherichia coli. Gallin may participate in the protection of the embryo during its development in the egg. Its sequence is related to antimicrobial β-defensin peptides. In the present study, gallin was chemically synthesized 1) to further investigate its antimicrobial spectrum and 2) to solve its three-dimensional NMR structure and thus gain insight into structure-function relationships, a prerequisite to understanding its mode(s) of action. Antibacterial assays confirmed that gallin was active against Escherichia coli, but no additional antibacterial activity was observed against the other Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria tested. The three-dimensional structure of gallin, which is the first ovodefensin structure to have been solved to date, displays a new five-stranded arrangement. The gallin three-dimensional fold contains the three-stranded antiparallel β-sheet and the disulfide bridge array typical of vertebrate β-defensins. Gallin can therefore be unambiguously classified as a β-defensin. However, an additional short two-stranded β-sheet reveals that gallin and presumably the other ovodefensins form a new structural subfamily of β-defensins. Moreover, gallin and the other ovodefensins calculated by homology modeling exhibit atypical hydrophobic surface properties, compared with the already known vertebrate β-defensins. These specific structural features of gallin might be related to its restricted activity against E. coli and/or to other yet unknown functions. This work provides initial understanding of a critical sequence-structure-function relationship for the ovodefensin family.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Fatima Oukhatar; Hervé Meudal; Céline Landon; Nk Logothetis; Carlos Platas-Iglesias; Goran Angelovski; Éva Tóth
A series of Gd(3+) complexes exhibiting a relaxometric response to zwitterionic amino acid neurotransmitters was synthesized. The design concept involves ditopic interactions 1) between a positively charged and coordinatively unsaturated Gd(3+) chelate and the carboxylate group of the neurotransmitters and 2) between an azacrown ether appended to the chelate and the amino group of the neurotransmitters. The chelates differ in the nature and length of the linker connecting the cyclen-type macrocycle that binds the Ln(3+) ion and the crown ether. The complexes are monohydrated, but they exhibit high proton relaxivities (up to 7.7 mM(-1) s(-1) at 60 MHz, 310 K) due to slow molecular tumbling. The formation of ternary complexes with neurotransmitters was monitored by (1) H relaxometric titrations of the Gd(3+) complexes and by luminescence measurements on the Eu(3+) and Tb(3+) analogues at pH 7.4. The remarkable relaxivity decrease (≈80 %) observed on neurotransmitter binding is related to the decrease in the hydration number, as evidenced by luminescence lifetime measurements on the Eu(3+) complexes. These complexes show affinity for amino acid neurotransmitters in the millimolar range, which can be suited to imaging concentrations of synaptically released neurotransmitters. They display good selectivity over non-amino acid neurotransmitters (acetylcholine, serotonin, and noradrenaline) and hydrogenphosphate, but selectivity over hydrogencarbonate was not achieved.
Journal of Peptide Science | 2012
Corinne Buré; Philippe Marceau; Hervé Meudal; Agnès F. Delmas
C‐terminally modified peptides aldehyde (glycinal and alpha‐oxo aldehyde peptides) and ketone (pyruvic acid‐containing peptide) were synthesised to get new insights into the mechanism of acido‐catalysed oxime ligation. Their tetrahedral hydrated forms were investigated in solution and in the gas phase, using NMR and in‐source collision‐induced dissociation mass spectrometry, respectively, and the kinetics of the oximation reactions followed using analytical HPLC. The results obtained confirmed that the first step of the oximation reaction was the limiting step for the pyruvic acid‐containing peptides because of the steric effect and of the carbon angular strain of the ketone. The second step is the determining step for the aldehyde peptides because the basicity of the oxygen of the hydroxyl function of the tetrahedral form is greater for glycinal than for alpha‐oxo aldehyde. These data strongly suggest that the hydrated form of the aldehyde partner has to be considered when oxime reactions are performed in aqueous buffer. Copyright
PLOS ONE | 2016
Geoffrey Bailleul; Amanda Kravtzoff; Alix Joulin-Giet; Fabien Lecaille; Valérie Labas; Hervé Meudal; Karine Loth; Ana-Paula Teixeira-Gomes; Florence B. Gilbert; Laurent Coquet; Thierry Jouenne; Dieter Brömme; Catherine Schouler; Céline Landon; Gilles Lalmanach; Anne-Christine Lalmanach
Defensins are frontline peptides of mucosal immunity in the animal kingdom, including birds. Their resistance to proteolysis and their ensuing ability to maintain antimicrobial potential remains questionable and was therefore investigated. We have shown by bottom-up mass spectrometry analysis of protein extracts that both avian beta-defensins AvBD2 and AvBD7 were ubiquitously distributed along the chicken gut. Cathepsin B was found by immunoblotting in jejunum, ileum, caecum, and caecal tonsils, while cathepsins K, L, and S were merely identified in caecal tonsils. Hydrolysis product of AvBD2 and AvBD7 incubated with a panel of proteases was analysed by RP-HPLC, mass spectrometry and antimicrobial assays. AvBD2 and AvBD7 were resistant to serine proteases and to cathepsins D and H. Conversely cysteine cathepsins B, K, L, and S degraded AvBD2 and abolished its antibacterial activity. Only cathepsin K cleaved AvBD7 and released Ile4-AvBD7, a N-terminal truncated natural peptidoform of AvBD7 that displayed antibacterial activity. Besides the 3-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet typical of beta-defensins, structural analysis of AvBD7 by two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy highlighted the restricted accessibility of the C-terminus embedded by the N-terminal region and gave a formal evidence of a salt bridge (Asp9-Arg12) that could account for proteolysis resistance. The differential susceptibility of avian defensins to proteolysis opens intriguing questions about a distinctive role in the mucosal immunity against pathogen invasion.
Biopolymers | 2006
Céline Landon; Hervé Meudal; Nathalie Boulanger; Philippe Bulet; Françoise Vovelle
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009
Yves Aubert; Marcel Chassignol; Victoria Roig; Gladys Mbemba; Julien Weiss; Hervé Meudal; Jean-François Mouscadet; Ulysse Asseline
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Herve; Hervé Meudal; Labas; Sophie Réhault-Godbert; Joël Gautron; Magali Berges; Nicolas Guyot; Agnès F. Delmas; Yves Nys; Céline Landon