Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jean-François Collet is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jean-François Collet.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

A New Class of Phosphotransferases Phosphorylated on an Aspartate Residue in an Amino-terminal DXDX(T/V) Motif

Jean-François Collet; Vincent Stroobant; Michel Pirard; Ghislain Delpierre; Emile Van Schaftingen

When incubated with their substrates, human phosphomannomutase and l-3-phosphoserine phosphatase are known to form phosphoenzymes with chemical characteristics of an acyl-phosphate. The phosphorylated residue in phosphomannomutase has now been identified by mass spectrometry after reduction of the phosphoenzyme with tritiated borohydride and trypsin digestion. It is the first aspartate in a conserved DVDGT motif. Replacement of either aspartate of this motif by asparagine or glutamate resulted in complete inactivation of the enzyme. The same mutations performed in the DXDST motif of l-3-phosphoserine phosphatase also resulted in complete inactivation of the enzyme, except for the replacement of the second aspartate by glutamate, which reduced the activity by only about 40%. This suggests that the first aspartate of the motif is also the phosphorylated residue inl-3-phosphoserine phosphatase. Data banks contained seven other phosphomutases or phosphatases sharing a similar, totally conserved DXDX(T/V) motif at their amino terminus. One of these (β-phosphoglucomutase) is shown to form a phosphoenzyme with the characteristics of an acyl-phosphate. In conclusion, phosphomannomutase and l-3-phosphoserine phosphatase belong to a new phosphotransferase family with an amino-terminal DXDX(T/V) motif that serves as an intermediate phosphoryl acceptor.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

Oxidative protein folding in bacteria

Jean-François Collet; James C. A. Bardwell

Ten years ago it was thought that disulphide bond formation in prokaryotes occurred spontaneously. Now two pathways involved in disulphide bond formation have been well characterized, the oxidative pathway, which is responsible for the formation of disulphides, and the isomerization pathway, which shuffles incorrectly formed disulphides. Disulphide bonds are donated directly to unfolded polypeptides by the DsbA protein; DsbA is reoxidized by DsbB. DsbB generates disulphides de novo from oxidized quinones. These quinones are reoxidized by the electron transport chain, showing that disulphide bond formation is actually driven by electron transport. Disulphide isomerization requires that incorrect disulphides be attacked using a reduced catalyst, followed by the redonation of the disulphide, allowing alternative disulphide pairing. Two isomerases exist in Escherichia coli, DsbC and DsbG. The membrane protein DsbD maintains these disulphide isomerases in their reduced and thereby active form. DsbD is kept reduced by cytosolic thioredoxin in an NADPH‐dependent reaction.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2010

Structure, function and mechanism of thioredoxin proteins

Jean-François Collet; Joris Messens

Thioredoxins are ubiquitous antioxidant enzymes that play important roles in many health-related cellular processes. As such, the fundamental knowledge of how these enzymes work is of prime importance for understanding cellular redox mechanisms and for laying the ground for the development of future therapeutic approaches. Over the past 40 years, a really impressive amount of data has been published on thioredoxins. Here, we review the most significant results that have contributed to our knowledge regarding the structure, the function, and the mechanism of these crucial enzymes.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Sequence of a putative glucose 6-phosphate translocase, mutated in glycogen storage disease type Ib.

Isabelle Gerin; Maria Veiga-da-Cunha; Younes Achouri; Jean-François Collet; Emile Van Schaftingen

We report the sequence of a human cDNA that encodes a 46 kDa transmembrane protein homologous to bacterial transporters for phosphate esters. This protein presents at its carboxy terminus the consensus motif for retention in the endoplasmic reticulum. Northern blots of rat tissues indicate that the corresponding mRNA is mostly expressed in liver and kidney. In two patients with glycogen storage disease type Ib, mutations were observed that either replaced a conserved Gly to Cys or introduced a premature stop codon. The encoded protein is therefore most likely the glucose 6‐phosphate translocase that is functionally associated with glucose‐6‐phosphatase.


Science | 2009

A periplasmic reducing system protects single cysteine residues from oxidation.

Matthieu Depuydt; Stephen E. Leonard; Didier Vertommen; Katleen Denoncin; Pierre Morsomme; Khadija Wahni; Joris Messens; Kate S. Carroll; Jean-François Collet

Periplasmic Redox Regulation The oxidation state of intracellular and extracellular proteins are carefully managed by cellular redox machineries. Depuydt et al. (p. 1109) discovered a reducing system that protects single cysteine residues from oxidation in the bacterial periplasm. DsbG, a thioredoxin-related protein, appears to be a key player in that system and is the first reductase identified in the periplasm of Escherichia coli. Together with DsbC, DsbG controls the global sulfenic acid content of this compartment. Sulfenic acid formation is a major posttranslational modification in the periplasm, and three homologous L,D-transpeptidases are substrates of DsbG. Sulfenic acid formation is not restricted to E. coli, but is ubiquitous. Because proteins from the thioredoxin superfamily are widespread, similar thioredoxin-related proteins may control cellular sulfenic acid more widely. A thioredoxin-like enzyme controls the oxidation state of the bacterial periplasm. The thiol group of the amino acid cysteine can be modified to regulate protein activity. The Escherichia coli periplasm is an oxidizing environment in which most cysteine residues are involved in disulfide bonds. However, many periplasmic proteins contain single cysteine residues, which are vulnerable to oxidation to sulfenic acids and then irreversibly modified to sulfinic and sulfonic acids. We discovered that DsbG and DsbC, two thioredoxin-related proteins, control the global sulfenic acid content of the periplasm and protect single cysteine residues from oxidation. DsbG interacts with the YbiS protein and, along with DsbC, regulates oxidation of its catalytic cysteine residue. Thus, a potentially widespread mechanism controls sulfenic acid modification in the cellular environment.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2011

How Proteins Form Disulfide Bonds

Matthieu Depuydt; Joris Messens; Jean-François Collet

The identification of protein disulfide isomerase, almost 50 years ago, opened the way to the study of oxidative protein folding. Oxidative protein folding refers to the composite process by which a protein recovers both its native structure and its native disulfide bonds. Pathways that form disulfide bonds have now been unraveled in the bacterial periplasm (disulfide bond protein A [DsbA], DsbB, DsbC, DsbG, and DsbD), the endoplasmic reticulum (protein disulfide isomerase and Ero1), and the mitochondrial intermembrane space (Mia40 and Erv1). This review summarizes the current knowledge on disulfide bond formation in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes and highlights the major problems that remain to be solved.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Copper stress causes an in vivo requirement for the Escherichia coli disulfide isomerase DsbC

Annie Hiniker; Jean-François Collet; James C. A. Bardwell

In Escherichia coli, the periplasmic disulfide oxidoreductase DsbA is thought to be a powerful but nonspecific oxidant, joining cysteines together the moment they enter the periplasm. DsbC, the primary disulfide isomerase, likely resolves incorrect disulfides. Given the reliance of protein function on correct disulfide bonds, it is surprising that no phenotype has been established for null mutations in dsbC. Here we demonstrate that mutations in the entire DsbC disulfide isomerization pathway cause an increased sensitivity to the redox-active metal copper. We find that copper catalyzes periplasmic disulfide bond formation under aerobic conditions and that copper catalyzes the formation of disulfide-bonded oligomers in vitro, which DsbC can resolve. Our data suggest that the copper sensitivity of dsbC– strains arises from the inability of the cell to rearrange copper-catalyzed non-native disulfides in the absence of functional DsbC. Absence of functional DsbA augments the deleterious effects of copper on a dsbC– strain, even though the dsbA– single mutant is unaffected by copper. This may indicate that DsbA successfully competes with copper and forms disulfide bonds more accurately than copper does. These findings lead us to a model in which DsbA may be significantly more accurate in disulfide oxidation than previously thought, and in which the primary role of DsbC may be to rearrange incorrect disulfide bonds that are formed during certain oxidative stresses.


Proteomics | 2009

Characterization of the role of the Escherichia coli periplasmic chaperone SurA using differential proteomics.

Didier Vertommen; Natividad Ruiz; Pauline Leverrier; Thomas J. Silhavy; Jean-François Collet

Little is known on how β‐barrel proteins are assembled in the outer membrane (OM) of Gram‐negative bacteria. SurA has been proposed to be the primary chaperone escorting the bulk mass of OM proteins across the periplasm. However, the impact of SurA deletion on the global OM proteome has not been determined, limiting therefore our understanding of the function of SurA. By using a differential proteomics approach based on 2‐D LC‐MSn, we compared the relative abundance of 64 OM proteins, including 23 β‐barrel proteins, in wild‐type and surA strains. Unexpectedly, we found that the loss of SurA affects the abundance of eight β‐barrel proteins. Of all the decreased proteins, FhuA and LptD are the only two for which the decreased protein abundance cannot be attributed, at least in part, to decreased mRNA levels in the surA strain. In the case of LptD, an essential protein involved in OM biogenesis, our data support a role for SurA in the assembly of this protein and suggest that LptD is a true SurA substrate. Based on our results, we propose a revised model in which only a subset of OM proteins depends on SurA for proper folding and insertion in the OM.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Mechanistic studies of phosphoserine phosphatase, an enzyme related to P-type ATPases.

Jean-François Collet; Vincent Stroobant; Emile Van Schaftingen

Phosphoserine phosphatase belongs to a new class of phosphotransferases forming an acylphosphate during catalysis and sharing three motifs with P-type ATPases and haloacid dehalogenases. The phosphorylated residue was identified as the first aspartate in the first motif (DXDXT) by mass spectrometry analysis of peptides derived from the phosphorylated enzyme treated with NaBH4 or alkaline [18O]H2O. Incubation of native phosphoserine phosphatase with phosphoserine in [18O]H2O did not result in 18O incorporation in residue Asp-20, indicating that the phosphoaspartate is hydrolyzed, as in P-type ATPases, by attack of the phosphorus atom. Mutagenesis studies bearing on conserved residues indicated that four conservative changes either did not affect (S109T) or caused a moderate decrease in activity (G178A, D179E, and D183E). Other mutations inactivated the enzyme by >80% (S109A and G180A) or even by ≥99% (D179N, D183N, K158A, and K158R). Mutations G178A and D179N decreased the affinity for phosphoserine, suggesting that these residues participate in the binding of the substrate. Mutations of Asp-179 decreased the affinity for Mg2+, indicating that this residue interacts with the cation. Thus, investigated residues appear to play an important role in the reaction mechanism of phosphoserine phosphatase, as is known for equivalent residues in P-type ATPases and haloacid dehalogenases.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

The disulphide isomerase DsbC cooperates with the oxidase DsbA in a DsbD-independent manner

Didier Vertommen; Matthieu Depuydt; Jonathan L. Pan; Pauline Leverrier; Laurent Knoops; Jean-Pierre Szikora; Joris Messens; James C. A. Bardwell; Jean-François Collet

In Escherichia coli, DsbA introduces disulphide bonds into secreted proteins. DsbA is recycled by DsbB, which generates disulphides from quinone reduction. DsbA is not known to have any proofreading activity and can form incorrect disulphides in proteins with multiple cysteines. These incorrect disulphides are thought to be corrected by a protein disulphide isomerase, DsbC, which is kept in the reduced and active configuration by DsbD. The DsbC/DsbD isomerization pathway is considered to be isolated from the DsbA/DsbB pathway. We show that the DsbC and DsbA pathways are more intimately connected than previously thought. dsbA‐dsbC‐ mutants have a number of phenotypes not exhibited by either dsbA‐, dsbC‐ or dsbA‐dsbD‐ mutations: they exhibit an increased permeability of the outer membrane, are resistant to the lambdoid phage Φ80, and are unable to assemble the maltoporin LamB. Using differential two‐dimensional liquid chromatographic tandem mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry analysis, we estimated the abundance of about 130 secreted proteins in various dsb‐ strains. dsbA‐dsbC‐ mutants exhibit unique changes at the protein level that are not exhibited by dsbA‐dsbD‐ mutants. Our data indicate that DsbC can assist DsbA in a DsbD‐independent manner to oxidatively fold envelope proteins. The view that DsbCs function is limited to the disulphide isomerization pathway should therefore be reinterpreted.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jean-François Collet's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Didier Vertommen

Université catholique de Louvain

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emile Van Schaftingen

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joris Messens

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katleen Denoncin

Université catholique de Louvain

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pauline Leverrier

Université catholique de Louvain

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Seung Hyun Cho

Seoul National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vincent Stroobant

Catholic University of Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexandra Gennaris

Université catholique de Louvain

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthieu Depuydt

Université catholique de Louvain

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge