Network


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

Hotspot


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

Publication


Featured researches published by Jean-François Ménétret.


Molecular Cell | 2000

The Structure of Ribosome-Channel Complexes Engaged in Protein Translocation

Jean-François Ménétret; Andrea Neuhof; David Gene Morgan; Kathrin Plath; Michael Radermacher; Christopher W. Akey

Cotranslational translocation of proteins requires ribosome binding to the Sec61p channel at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. We have used electron cryomicroscopy to determine the structures of ribosome-channel complexes in the absence or presence of translocating polypeptide chains. Surprisingly, the structures are similar and contain 3-4 connections between the ribosome and channel that leave a lateral opening into the cytosol. Therefore, the ribosome-channel junction may allow the direct transfer of polypeptides into the channel and provide a path for the egress of some nascent chains into the cytosol. Moreover, complexes solubilized from mammalian ER membranes contain an additional membrane protein that has a large, lumenal protrusion and is intercalated into the wall of the Sec61p channel. Thus, the native channel contains a component that is not essential for translocation.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Structure of the mammalian ribosome-channel complex at 17 Å resolution

David Gene Morgan; Jean-François Ménétret; Andrea Neuhof; Christopher W. Akey

The co-translational translocation of proteins into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen and the biogenesis of membrane proteins require ribosome binding to a membrane channel formed by the Sec61p complex. We now report the 17A structure of a mammalian ribosome-channel complex derived from ER membranes. Atomic models of the ribosomal subunits were aligned to the programmed ribosome from Thermus thermophilus, to provide a common reference frame. The T.thermophilus ribosome, and by extension all known high resolution subunit models, were then docked within our map of the ribosome-channel complex. The structure shows that the ribosome contains a putative tRNA in the exit site, and a comparison with a non-programmed, yeast ribosome suggests that the L1 stalk may function as a gate in the tRNA exit path. We have localized six major expansion segments in the large subunit of the vertebrate ribosome including ES27, and suggest a function for ES30. The large ribosomal subunit is linked to the channel by four connections. We identified regions in the large subunit rRNA and four proteins that may help form the connections. These regions of the ribosome probably serve as a template to guide the assembly of the asymmetric translocation channel. Three of the connections form a picket fence that separates the putative translocation pore from the attachment site of an additional membrane component. The ribosome-channel connections also create an open junction that would allow egress of a nascent chain into the cytosol. At a threshold that is appropriate for the entire complex, the channel is rather solid and the lumenal half of the putative translocation pore is closed. These data suggest that the flow of small molecules across the membrane may be impeded by the channel itself, rather than the ribosome-channel junction.


Nature | 2014

Structure of the SecY channel during initiation of protein translocation

Eunyong Park; Jean-François Ménétret; James C. Gumbart; Steven J. Ludtke; Weikai Li; Andrew Whynot; Christopher W. Akey

Many secretory proteins are targeted by signal sequences to a protein-conducting channel, formed by prokaryotic SecY or eukaryotic Sec61 complexes, and are translocated across the membrane during their synthesis. Crystal structures of the inactive channel show that the SecY subunit of the heterotrimeric complex consists of two halves that form an hourglass-shaped pore with a constriction in the middle of the membrane and a lateral gate that faces the lipid phase. The closed channel has an empty cytoplasmic funnel and an extracellular funnel that is filled with a small helical domain, called the plug. During initiation of translocation, a ribosome–nascent chain complex binds to the SecY (or Sec61) complex, resulting in insertion of the nascent chain. However, the mechanism of channel opening during translocation is unclear. Here we have addressed this question by determining structures of inactive and active ribosome–channel complexes with cryo-electron microscopy. Non-translating ribosome–SecY channel complexes derived from Methanocaldococcus jannaschii or Escherichia coli show the channel in its closed state, and indicate that ribosome binding per se causes only minor changes. The structure of an active E. coli ribosome–channel complex demonstrates that the nascent chain opens the channel, causing mostly rigid body movements of the amino- and carboxy-terminal halves of SecY. In this early translocation intermediate, the polypeptide inserts as a loop into the SecY channel with the hydrophobic signal sequence intercalated into the open lateral gate. The nascent chain also forms a loop on the cytoplasmic surface of SecY rather than entering the channel directly.


Structure | 2008

Single Copies of Sec61 and TRAP Associate with a Nontranslating Mammalian Ribosome

Jean-François Ménétret; Ramanujan S. Hegde; Mike Aguiar; Steven P. Gygi; Eunyong Park; Christopher W. Akey

During cotranslational protein translocation, the ribosome associates with a membrane channel, formed by the Sec61 complex, and recruits the translocon-associated protein complex (TRAP). Here we report the structure of a ribosome-channel complex from mammalian endoplasmic reticulum in which the channel has been visualized at 11 A resolution. In this complex, single copies of Sec61 and TRAP associate with a nontranslating ribosome and this stoichiometry was verified by quantitative mass spectrometry. A bilayer-like density surrounds the channel and can be attributed to lipid and detergent. The crystal structure of an archaeal homolog of the Sec61 complex was then docked into the map. In this model, two cytoplasmic loops of Sec61 may interact with RNA helices H6, H7, and H50, while the central pore is located below the ribosome tunnel exit. Hence, this copy of Sec61 is positioned to capture and translocate the nascent chain. Finally, we show that mammalian and bacterial ribosome-channel complexes have similar architectures.


Nature | 2009

The origin of the electrostatic perturbation in acetoacetate decarboxylase

Meng Chiao Ho; Jean-François Ménétret; Hiro Tsuruta; Karen N. Allen

Acetoacetate decarboxylase (AADase) has long been cited as the prototypical example of the marked shifts in the pKa values of ionizable groups that can occur in an enzyme active site. In 1966, it was hypothesized that in AADase the origin of the large pKa perturbation (-4.5 log units) observed in the nucleophilic Lys 115 results from the proximity of Lys 116, marking the first proposal of microenvironment effects in enzymology. The electrostatic perturbation hypothesis has been demonstrated in a number of enzymes, but never for the enzyme that inspired its conception, owing to the lack of a three-dimensional structure. Here we present the X-ray crystal structures of AADase and of the enamine adduct with the substrate analogue 2,4-pentanedione. Surprisingly, the shift of the pKa of Lys 115 is not due to the proximity of Lys 116, the side chain of which is oriented away from the active site. Instead, Lys 116 participates in the structural anchoring of Lys 115 in a long, hydrophobic funnel provided by the novel fold of the enzyme. Thus, AADase perturbs the pKa of the nucleophile by means of a desolvation effect by placement of the side chain into the protein core while enforcing the proximity of polar residues, which facilitate decarboxylation through electrostatic and steric effects.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Structural insight into negative DNA supercoiling by DNA gyrase, a bacterial type 2A DNA topoisomerase

Julie Papillon; Jean-François Ménétret; Claire Batisse; Reynald Hélye; Patrick Schultz; Noelle Potier; Valérie Lamour

Type 2A DNA topoisomerases (Topo2A) remodel DNA topology during replication, transcription and chromosome segregation. These multisubunit enzymes catalyze the transport of a double-stranded DNA through a transient break formed in another duplex. The bacterial DNA gyrase, a target for broad-spectrum antibiotics, is the sole Topo2A enzyme able to introduce negative supercoils. We reveal here for the first time the architecture of the full-length Thermus thermophilus DNA gyrase alone and in a cleavage complex with a 155 bp DNA duplex in the presence of the antibiotic ciprofloxacin, using cryo-electron microscopy. The structural organization of the subunits of the full-length DNA gyrase points to a central role of the ATPase domain acting like a ‘crossover trap’ that may help to sequester the DNA positive crossover before strand passage. Our structural data unveil how DNA is asymmetrically wrapped around the gyrase-specific C-terminal β-pinwheel domains and guided to introduce negative supercoils through cooperativity between the ATPase and β-pinwheel domains. The overall conformation of the drug-induced DNA binding–cleavage complex also suggests that ciprofloxacin traps a DNA pre-transport conformation.


Nature Communications | 2015

The molecular structure of the left-handed supra-molecular helix of eukaryotic polyribosomes.

Alexander G. Myasnikov; Zhanna A. Afonina; Jean-François Ménétret; Vladimir A. Shirokov; Alexander S. Spirin; Bruno P. Klaholz

During protein synthesis, several ribosomes bind to a single messenger RNA (mRNA) forming large macromolecular assemblies called polyribosomes. Here we report the detailed molecular structure of a 100 MDa eukaryotic poly-ribosome complex derived from cryo electron tomography, sub-tomogram averaging and pseudo-atomic modelling by crystal structure fitting. The structure allowed the visualization of the three functional parts of the polysome assembly, the central core region that forms a rather compact left-handed supra-molecular helix, and the more open regions that harbour the initiation and termination sites at either ends. The helical region forms a continuous mRNA channel where the mRNA strand bridges neighbouring exit and entry sites of the ribosomes and prevents mRNA looping between ribosomes. This structure provides unprecedented insights into protein- and RNA-mediated inter-ribosome contacts that involve conserved sites through 40S subunits and long protruding RNA expansion segments, suggesting a role in stabilizing the overall polyribosomal assembly.


Biology of the Cell | 2017

The integrative role of cryo electron microscopy in molecular and cellular structural biology.

Igor Orlov; Alexander G. Myasnikov; Leonid Andronov; S. Kundhavai Natchiar; Heena Khatter; Brice Beinsteiner; Jean-François Ménétret; Isabelle Hazemann; Kareem Mohideen; Karima Tazibt; Rachel Tabaroni; Hanna Kratzat; Nadia Djabeur; Tatiana Bruxelles; Finaritra Raivoniaina; Lorenza di Pompeo; Morgan Torchy; Isabelle M. L. Billas; Alexandre Urzhumtsev; Bruno P. Klaholz

After gradually moving away from preparation methods prone to artefacts such as plastic embedding and negative staining for cell sections and single particles, the field of cryo electron microscopy (cryo‐EM) is now heading off at unprecedented speed towards high‐resolution analysis of biological objects of various sizes. This ‘revolution in resolution’ is happening largely thanks to new developments of new‐generation cameras used for recording the images in the cryo electron microscope which have much increased sensitivity being based on complementary metal oxide semiconductor devices. Combined with advanced image processing and 3D reconstruction, the cryo‐EM analysis of nucleoprotein complexes can provide unprecedented insights at molecular and atomic levels and address regulatory mechanisms in the cell. These advances reinforce the integrative role of cryo‐EM in synergy with other methods such as X‐ray crystallography, fluorescence imaging or focussed‐ion beam milling as exemplified here by some recent studies from our laboratory on ribosomes, viruses, chromatin and nuclear receptors. Such multi‐scale and multi‐resolution approaches allow integrating molecular and cellular levels when applied to purified or in situ macromolecular complexes, thus illustrating the trend of the field towards cellular structural biology.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Structure of the 70S ribosome from human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus.

Iskander Khusainov; Quentin Vicens; Anthony Bochler; François Grosse; Alexander Myasnikov; Jean-François Ménétret; Johana Chicher; Stefano Marzi; Pascale Romby; Gulnara Yusupova; Marat Yusupov; Yaser Hashem

Comparative structural studies of ribosomes from various organisms keep offering exciting insights on how species-specific or environment-related structural features of ribosomes may impact translation specificity and its regulation. Although the importance of such features may be less obvious within more closely related organisms, their existence could account for vital yet species-specific mechanisms of translation regulation that would involve stalling, cell survival and antibiotic resistance. Here, we present the first full 70S ribosome structure from Staphylococcus aureus, a Gram-positive pathogenic bacterium, solved by cryo-electron microscopy. Comparative analysis with other known bacterial ribosomes pinpoints several unique features specific to S. aureus around a conserved core, at both the protein and the RNA levels. Our work provides the structural basis for the many studies aiming at understanding translation regulation in S. aureus and for designing drugs against this often multi-resistant pathogen.


Biochemistry | 2013

Topology of mRNA chain in isolated eukaryotic double-row polyribosomes

Zh. A. Afonina; Alexander G. Myasnikov; N. F. Khabibullina; A. Yu. Belorusova; Jean-François Ménétret; Victor D. Vasiliev; Bruno P. Klaholz; Vladimir A. Shirokov; Alexander S. Spirin

In the process of protein synthesis, the translating ribosomes of eukaryotic cells form polyribosomes that are found to be multiplex functional complexes possessing elements of ordered spatial organization. As revealed by a number of electron microscopy studies, the predominant visible configurations of the eukaryotic polyribosomes are circles (circular polyribosomes) and two-stranded formations (so-called double-row polyribosomes). The “long” (i.e. heavy loaded) polyribosomes are usually represented by double-row structures, which can be interpreted as either topologically circular (“col-lapsed rings”), or topologically linear (zigzags or helices). In the present work we have analyzed the mRNA path within the eukaryotic polyribosomes, isolated from a wheat germ cell-free translation system, by integrating two approaches: the visualization of mRNA ends in polyribosomes by marking them with gold nanoparticles (3′-end) and initiating 40S subunits (5′-end), as well as by the cryoelectron tomography. Examination of the location of the mRNA markers in polyribosomes and mutual orientation of ribosomes in them has shown that the double-row polyribosomes of the same sample can have both circular and linear arrangements of their mRNA.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jean-François Ménétret's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexander G. Myasnikov

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bruno P. Klaholz

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven J. Ludtke

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrea Neuhof

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Isabelle Hazemann

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julie Papillon

University of Strasbourg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge