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Dive into the research topics where Isabelle Sorel is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabelle Sorel.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Structure of Protein Phosphatase Methyltransferase 1 (PPM1), a Leucine Carboxyl Methyltransferase Involved in the Regulation of Protein Phosphatase 2A Activity

Nicolas Leulliot; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Isabelle Sorel; Inés Li de la Sierra-Gallay; Bruno Collinet; Marc Graille; Karine Blondeau; Nabila Bettache; Anne Poupon; Joël Janin; Herman van Tilbeurgh

The important role of the serine/threonine protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) in various cellular processes requires a precise and dynamic regulation of PP2A activity, localization, and substrate specificity. The regulation of the function of PP2A involves the reversible methylation of the COOH group of the C-terminal leucine of the catalytic subunit, which, in turn, controls the enzymes heteromultimeric composition and confers different protein recognition and substrate specificity. We have determined the structure of PPM1, the yeast methyltransferase responsible for methylation of PP2A. The structure of PPM1 reveals a common S-adenosyl-l-methionine-dependent methyltransferase fold, with several insertions conferring the specific function and substrate recognition. The complexes with the S-adenosyl-l-methionine methyl donor and the S-adenosyl-l-homocysteine product and inhibitor unambiguously revealed the co-substrate binding site and provided a convincing hypothesis for the PP2A C-terminal peptide binding site. The structure of PPM1 in a second crystal form provides clues to the dynamic nature of the PPM1/PP2A interaction.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Crystal structure of the yeast phox homology (PX) domain protein Grd19p complexed to phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate

Cong-Zhao Zhou; Inés Li de la Sierra-Gallay; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Bruno Collinet; Philippe Minard; Karine Blondeau; Gilles Henckes; Robert Aufrère; Nicolas Leulliot; Marc Graille; Isabelle Sorel; Philippe Savarin; Françoise de la Torre; Anne Poupon; Joël Janin; Herman van Tilbeurgh

Phox homology (PX) domains have been recently identified in a number of different proteins and are involved in various cellular functions such as vacuolar targeting and membrane protein trafficking. It was shown that these modules of about 130 amino acids specifically binding to phosphoinositides and that this interaction is crucial for their cellular function. The yeast genome contains 17 PX domain proteins. One of these, Grd19p, is involved in the localization of the late Golgi membrane proteins DPAP A and Kex2p. Grd19p consists of the PX domain with 30 extra residues at the N-terminal and is homologous to the functionally characterized human sorting nexin protein SNX3. We determined the 2.0 Å crystal structure of Grd19p in the free form and in complex with d-myo-phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (diC4PtdIns(3)P), representing the first case of both free and ligand-bound conformations of the same PX module. The ligand occupies a well defined positively charged binding pocket at the interface between the β-sheet and α-helical parts of the molecule. The structure of the free and bound protein are globally similar but show some significant differences in a region containing a polyproline peptide and a putative membrane attachment site.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Crystal Structure of the Bifunctional Chorismate Synthase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Nicolas Leulliot; Philippe Meyer; Marc Graille; Michael Bremang; Karine Blondeau; Isabelle Sorel; Anne Poupon; Joël Janin; Herman van Tilbeurgh

Chorismate synthase (EC 4.2.3.5), the seventh enzyme in the shikimate pathway, catalyzes the transformation of 5-enolpyruvylshikimate 3-phosphate (EPSP) to chorismate, which is the last common precursor in the biosynthesis of numerous aromatic compounds in bacteria, fungi, and plants. The chorismate synthase reaction involves a 1,4-trans-elimination of phosphoric acid from EPSP and has an absolute requirement for reduced FMN as a cofactor. We have determined the three-dimensional x-ray structure of the yeast chorismate synthase from selenomethionine-labeled crystals at 2.2-Å resolution. The structure shows a novel βαβα fold consisting of an alternate tight packing of two α-helical and two β-sheet layers, showing no resemblance to any documented protein structure. The molecule is arranged as a tight tetramer with D2 symmetry, in accordance with its quaternary structure in solution. Electron density is missing for 23% of the amino acids, spread over sequence regions that in the three-dimensional structure converge on the surface of the protein. Many totally conserved residues are contained within these regions, and they probably form a structured but mobile domain that closes over a cleft upon substrate binding and catalysis. This hypothesis is supported by previously published spectroscopic measurements implying that the enzyme undergoes considerable structural changes upon binding of both FMN and EPSP.


Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2003

A structural genomics initiative on yeast proteins.

Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Bruno Collinet; Cong-Zhao Zhou; Philippe Minard; Karine Blondeau; Gilles Henkes; Robert Aufrère; Jérôme Coutant; Eric Guittet; Anita Lewit-Bentley; Nicolas Leulliot; Isabella Ascone; Isabelle Sorel; Philippe Savarin; Ines Li de La Sierra Gallay; Françoise de la Torre; Anne Poupon; Roger Fourme; Joël Janin; Herman van Tilbeurgh

A canonical structural genomics programme is being conducted at the Paris-Sud campus area on bakers yeast proteins. Experimental strategies, first results and identified bottlenecks are presented. The actual or potential contributions to the structural genomics of several experimental structure-determination methods are discussed.


Proteins | 2004

Crystal Structure of the Ygr205W Protein from Saccharomyces Cerevisiae: Close Structural Resemblance to E.Coli Pantothenate Kinase

Inés Li de la Sierra-Gallay; Bruno Collinet; Marc Graille; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Dominique Liger; Philippe Minard; Karine Blondeau; Gilles Henckes; Robert Aufrère; Nicolas Leulliot; Cong-Zhao Zhou; Isabelle Sorel; Jean-Luc Ferrer; Anne Poupon; Joël Janin; Herman van Tilbeurgh

The protein product of the YGR205w gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was targeted as part of our yeast structural genomics project. YGR205w codes for a small (290 amino acids) protein with unknown structure and function. The only recognizable sequence feature is the presence of a Walker A motif (P loop) indicating a possible nucleotide binding/converting function. We determined the three‐dimensional crystal structure of Se‐methionine substituted protein using multiple anomalous diffraction. The structure revealed a well known mononucleotide fold and strong resemblance to the structure of small metabolite phosphorylating enzymes such as pantothenate and phosphoribulo kinase. Biochemical experiments show that YGR205w binds specifically ATP and, less tightly, ADP. The structure also revealed the presence of two bound sulphate ions, occupying opposite niches in a canyon that corresponds to the active site of the protein. One sulphate is bound to the P‐loop in a position that corresponds to the position of β‐phosphate in mononucleotide protein ATP complex, suggesting the protein is indeed a kinase. The nature of the phosphate accepting substrate remains to be determined. Proteins 2004;54:000–000.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2005

High-throughput crystal-optimization strategies in the South Paris Yeast Structural Genomics Project: one size fits all?

Nicolas Leulliot; Lionel Trésaugues; Michael Bremang; Isabelle Sorel; Nathalie Ulryck; Marc Graille; Ilham Aboulfath; Anne Poupon; Dominique Liger; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Joël Janin; H. van Tilbeurgh

Crystallization has long been regarded as one of the major bottlenecks in high-throughput structural determination by X-ray crystallography. Structural genomics projects have addressed this issue by using robots to set up automated crystal screens using nanodrop technology. This has moved the bottleneck from obtaining the first crystal hit to obtaining diffraction-quality crystals, as crystal optimization is a notoriously slow process that is difficult to automatize. This article describes the high-throughput optimization strategies used in the Yeast Structural Genomics project, with selected successful examples.


Proteins | 2005

Crystal structure of YHI9, the yeast member of the phenazine biosynthesis PhzF enzyme superfamily

Dominique Liger; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Isabelle Sorel; Michael Bremang; Karine Blondeau; Ilham Aboulfath; Joël Janin; Herman van Tilbeurgh; Nicolas Leulliot

In the Pseudomonas bacterial genomes, the PhzF proteins are involved in the production of phenazine derivative antibiotic and antifungal compounds. The PhzF superfamily however also encompasses proteins in all genomes from bacteria to eukaryotes, for which no function has been assigned. We have determined the three dimensional crystal structure at 2.05 Å resolution of YHI9, the yeast member of the PhzF family. YHI9 has a fold similar to bacterial diaminopimelate epimerase, revealing a bimodular structure with an internal symmetry. Residue conservation identifies a putative active site at the interface between the two domains. Evolution of this protein by gene duplication, gene fusion and domain swapping from an ancestral gene containing the “hot dog” fold, identifies the protein as a “kinked double hot dog” fold. Proteins 2005.


Protein Science | 2009

Crystal structure of the YML079w protein from Saccharomyces cerevisiae reveals a new sequence family of the jelly‐roll fold

Cong-Zhao Zhou; Philippe Meyer; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Inés Li de la Sierra-Gallay; Bruno Collinet; Marc Graille; Karine Blondeau; Jean-Marie François; Nicolas Leulliot; Isabelle Sorel; Anne Poupon; Joël Janin; Herman van Tilbeurgh

We determined the three‐dimensional crystal structure of the protein YML079wp, encoded by a hypothetical open reading frame from Saccharomyces cerevisiae to a resolution of 1.75 Å. The protein has no close homologs and its molecular and cellular functions are unknown. The structure of the protein is a jelly‐roll fold consisting of ten β‐strands organized in two parallel packed β‐sheets. The protein has strong structural resemblance to the plant storage and ligand binding proteins (canavalin, glycinin, auxin binding protein) but also to some plant and bacterial enzymes (epimerase, germin). The protein forms homodimers in the crystal, confirming measurements of its molecular mass in solution. Two monomers have their β‐sheet packed together to form the dimer. The presence of a hydrophobic ligand in a well conserved pocket inside the barrel and local sequence similarity with bacterial epimerases may suggest a biochemical function for this protein.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2004

Statistical experimental design of protein crystallization screening revisited

Thanh Tam Tran; Isabelle Sorel; Anita Lewit-Bentley

A statistical experimental design approach was used to prepare a set of solutions for the screening of protein crystallization conditions. This approach is shown to be amenable to quantitative evaluation and therefore to the rational optimization of the screening results. All solutions contain a cryoprotectant, thus eliminating the need for subsequent optimization of crystal freezing conditions.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2006

Structures of in Vitro Evolved Binding Sites on Neocarzinostatin Scaffold Reveal Unanticipated Evolutionary Pathways.

Antoine Drevelle; Marc Graille; Bernadette Heyd; Isabelle Sorel; Nathalie Ulryck; Frédéric Pecorari; Michel Desmadril; Herman van Tilbeurgh; Philippe Minard

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Joël Janin

University of Paris-Sud

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Nicolas Leulliot

Paris Descartes University

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Marc Graille

University of Paris-Sud

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Anne Poupon

François Rabelais University

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Cong-Zhao Zhou

University of Science and Technology of China

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