Janine Guespin
University of Rouen
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Featured researches published by Janine Guespin.
Biochimie | 1999
Vic Norris; Stéphane Alexandre; Yves Bouligand; Dominique Cellier; Maurice Demarty; Gérard Gréhan; G. Gouesbet; Janine Guespin; Ezio Insinna; Loïs Le Sceller; Bruno Maheu; Chantal Monnier; Norman Grant; Tetsuo Onoda; Nicole Orange; Akinobu Oshima; Luc Picton; Hubert Polaert; Camille Ripoll; Michel Thellier; Jean-Marc Valleton; Marie-Claire Verdus; Jean-Claude Vincent; G. J. White; Philippa M. Wiggins
A myriad different constituents or elements (genes, proteins, lipids, ions, small molecules etc.) participate in numerous physico-chemical processes to create bacteria that can adapt to their environments to survive, grow and, via the cell cycle, reproduce. We explore the possibility that it is too difficult to explain cell cycle progression in terms of these elements and that an intermediate level of explanation is needed. This level is that of hyperstructures. A hyperstructure is large, has usually one particular function, and contains many elements. Non-equilibrium, or even dissipative, hyperstructures that, for example, assemble to transport and metabolize nutrients may comprise membrane domains of transporters plus cytoplasmic metabolons plus the genes that encode the hyperstructures enzymes. The processes involved in the putative formation of hyperstructures include: metabolite-induced changes to protein affinities that result in metabolon formation, lipid-organizing forces that result in lateral and transverse asymmetries, post-translational modifications, equilibration of water structures that may alter distributions of other molecules, transertion, ion currents, emission of electromagnetic radiation and long range mechanical vibrations. Equilibrium hyperstructures may also exist such as topological arrays of DNA in the form of cholesteric liquid crystals. We present here the beginning of a picture of the bacterial cell in which hyperstructures form to maximize efficiency and in which the properties of hyperstructures drive the cell cycle.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2002
Laura Camardella; Raffaela Di Fraia; Antonella Antignani; M. Antonietta Ciardiello; Guido di Prisco; Julie K Coleman; Laurent Buchon; Janine Guespin; Nicholas J. Russell
Psychrobacter sp. TAD1 is a psychrotolerant bacterium from Antarctic frozen continental water that grows from 2 to 25 degrees C with optimal growth rate at 20 degrees C. The new isolate contains two glutamate dehydrogenases (GDH), differing in their cofactor specificities, subunit sizes and arrangements, and thermal properties. NADP+-dependent GDH is a hexamer of 47 kDa subunits and it is comparable to other hexameric GDHs of family-I from bacteria and lower eukaria. The NAD+-dependent enzyme, described in this communication, has a subunit weight of 160 kDa and belongs to the novel class of GDHs with large size subunits. The enzyme is a dimer; this oligomeric arrangement has not been reported previously for GDH. Both enzymes have an apparent optimum temperature for activity of approximately 20 degrees C, but their cold activities and thermal labilities are different. The NAD+-dependent enzyme is more cold active: at 10 C it retains 50% of its maximal activity, compared with 10% for the NADP+-dependent enzyme. The NADP+-dependent enzyme is more heat stable, losing only 10% activity after heating for 30 min, compared with 95% for the NAD+-dependent enzyme. It is concluded that in Psychrobacter sp. TAD1 not only does NAD+-dependent GDH have a novel subunit molecular weight and arrangement, but that its polypeptide chains are folded differently from those of NADP+-dependent GDH, providing different cold-active properties to the two enzymes.
Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2004
Gilles Bernot; Jean-Paul Comet; Adrien Richard; Janine Guespin
Plant Biology | 2004
Michel Thellier; Jacques Demongeot; Victor Norris; Janine Guespin; Camille Ripoll; René Thomas
Journal of Biological Physics and Chemistry | 2003
Victor Norris; Patrick Amar; Gilles Bernot; Jean-Louis Giavitto; Christophe Godin; Janine Guespin; Hélène Pollard; Philippe Tracqui; François Képès
Biofutur | 2007
Gilles Bemot; Jean-Paul Comet; Janine Guespin
Journal of Biological Physics and Chemistry | 2006
Alain R. Thierry; François Képès; Patrick Amar; Georgia Barlovatz-Meimon; Gilles Bernot; Marie Beurton-Aimar; Marie Dutreix; Jean-Louis Giavitto; Janine Guespin; Jean-Pierre Mazat; Victor Norris; Vincent Schächter; Philippe Tracqui; Christophe Godin; Franck Molina
Symposium Modeling approaches in Systems Biology, Physiology, and Pathophysiology, Poitiers (Futuroscope), France | 2005
Gilles Bernot; Jean-Paul Comet; Janine Guespin
Réunion satellite des Journée Ouvertes Biologie Informatique Mathématiques (JOBIM) : <> | 2005
Janine Guespin; Didier Filopon; Annabelle Merieau; Gilles Bernot; Jean-Paul Comet; Benoit Polack
Journal of Biological Physics and Chemistry | 2005
Alain R. Thierry; François Képès; Patrick Amar; Georgia Barlovatz-Meimon; Gilles Bernot; Marie Beurton-Aimar; Marie Dutreix; Jean-Louis Giavitto; Janine Guespin; Jean-Pierre Mazat; Vic Norris; Vincent Schafter; Philippe Tracqui; Christophe Godin; Franck Molina