Jean-Marie Frachisse
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jean-Marie Frachisse.
Nature | 2006
A. De Angeli; Dario Monachello; G. Ephritikhine; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Sébastien Thomine; Franco Gambale; Hélène Barbier-Brygoo
Nitrate, the major nitrogen source for most plants, is widely used as a fertilizer and as a result has become a predominant freshwater pollutant. Plants need nitrate for growth and store most of it in the central vacuole. Some members of the chloride channel (CLC) protein family, such as the torpedo-fish ClC-0 and mammalian ClC-1, are anion channels, whereas the bacterial ClC-ec1 and mammalian ClC-4 and ClC-5 have recently been characterized as Cl-/H+ exchangers with unknown cellular functions. Plant members of the CLC family are proposed to be anion channels involved in nitrate homeostasis; however, direct evidence for anion transport mediated by a plant CLC is still lacking. Here we show that Arabidopsis thaliana CLCa (AtCLCa) is localized to an intracellular membrane, the tonoplast of the plant vacuole, which is amenable to electrophysiological studies, and we provide direct evidence for its anion transport ability. We demonstrate that AtCLCa is able to accumulate specifically nitrate in the vacuole and behaves as a NO3-/H+ exchanger. For the first time, to our knowledge, the transport activity of a plant CLC is revealed, the antiporter mechanism of a CLC protein is investigated in a native membrane system, and this property is directly connected with its physiological role.
Current Biology | 2008
Elizabeth S. Haswell; Rémi Peyronnet; Hélène Barbier-Brygoo; Elliot M. Meyerowitz; Jean-Marie Frachisse
In bacterial and animal systems, mechanosensitive (MS) ion channels are thought to mediate the perception of pressure, touch, and sound [1-3]. Although plants respond to a wide variety of mechanical stimuli, and although many mechanosensitive channel activities have been characterized in plant membranes by the patch-clamp method, the molecular nature of mechanoperception in plant systems has remained elusive [4]. Likely candidates are relatives of MscS (Mechanosensitive channel of small conductance), a well-characterized MS channel that serves to protect E. coli from osmotic shock [5]. Ten MscS-Like (MSL) proteins are found in the genome of the model flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana[4, 6, 7]. MSL2 and MSL3, along with MSC1, a MscS family member from green algae, are implicated in the control of organelle morphology [8, 9]. Here, we characterize MSL9 and MSL10, two MSL proteins found in the plasma membrane of root cells. We use a combined genetic and electrophysiological approach to show that MSL9 and MSL10, along with three other members of the MSL family, are required for MS channel activities detected in protoplasts derived from root cells. This is the first molecular identification and characterization of MS channels in plant membranes.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000
Hélène Barbier-Brygoo; Marion Vinauger; Jean Colcombet; Geneviève Ephritikhine; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Christophe Maurel
Anion channels are well documented in various tissues, cell types and membranes of algae and higher plants, and current evidence supports their central role in cell signaling, osmoregulation, plant nutrition and metabolism. It is the aim of this review to illustrate through a few selected examples the variety of anion channels operating in plant cells and some of their regulation properties and unique physiological functions. In contrast, information on the molecular structure of plant anion channels has only recently started to emerge. Only a few genes coding for putative plant anion channels from the large chloride channel (CLC) family have been isolated, and current molecular data on these plant CLCs are presented and discussed. A major challenge remains to identify the genes encoding the various anion channels described so far in plant cells. Future prospects along this line are briefly outlined, as well as recent advances based on the use of knockout mutants in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to explore the physiological functions of anion channels in planta.
The Plant Cell | 2002
David Wendehenne; Olivier Lamotte; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Hélène Barbier-Brygoo; Alain Pugin
There is much interest in the transduction pathways by which avirulent pathogens or derived elicitors activate plant defense responses. However, little is known about anion channel functions in this process. The aim of this study was to reveal the contribution of anion channels in the defense response triggered in tobacco by the elicitor cryptogein. Cryptogein induced a fast nitrate (NO3−) efflux that was sensitive to anion channel blockers and regulated by phosphorylation events and Ca2+ influx. Using a pharmacological approach, we provide evidence that NO3− efflux acts upstream of the cryptogein-induced oxidative burst and a 40-kD protein kinase whose activation seems to be controlled by the duration and intensity of anion efflux. Moreover, NO3− efflux inhibitors reduced and delayed the hypersensitive cell death triggered by cryptogein in tobacco plants. This was accompanied by a delay or a complete suppression of the induction of several defense-related genes, including hsr203J, a gene whose expression is correlated strongly with programmed cell death in plants. Our results indicate that anion channels are involved intimately in mediating defense responses and hypersensitive cell death.
Annual Review of Plant Biology | 2011
Hélène Barbier-Brygoo; Alexis De Angeli; Sophie Filleur; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Franco Gambale; Sébastien Thomine; Stefanie Wege
Anion channels/transporters are key to a wide spectrum of physiological functions in plants, such as osmoregulation, cell signaling, plant nutrition and compartmentalization of metabolites, and metal tolerance. The recent identification of gene families encoding some of these transport systems opened the way for gene expression studies, structure-function analyses of the corresponding proteins, and functional genomics approaches toward further understanding of their integrated roles in planta. This review, based on a few selected examples, illustrates that the members of a given gene family exhibit a diversity of substrate specificity, regulation, and intracellular localization, and are involved in a wide range of physiological functions. It also shows that post-translational modifications of transport proteins play a key role in the regulation of anion transport activity. Key questions arising from the increasing complexity of networks controlling anion transport in plant cells (the existence of redundancy, cross talk, and coordination between various pathways and compartments) are also addressed.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2009
Alexis De Angeli; Dario Monachello; Geneviève Ephritikhine; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Sébastien Thomine; Franco Gambale; Hélène Barbier-Brygoo
Plants need nitrate for growth and store the major part of it in the central vacuole of cells from root and shoot tissues. Based on few studies on the two model plants Arabidopsis thaliana and rice, members of the large ChLoride Channel (CLC) family have been proposed to encode anion channels/transporters involved in nitrate homeostasis. Proteins from the Arabidopsis CLC family (AtClC, comprising seven members) are present in various membrane compartments including the vacuolar membrane (AtClCa), Golgi vesicles (AtClCd and AtClCf) or chloroplast membranes (AtClCe). Through a combination of electrophysiological and genetic approaches, AtClCa was shown to function as a 2NO3−/1H+ exchanger that is able to accumulate specifically nitrate into the vacuole, in agreement with the main phenotypic trait of knockout mutant plants that accumulate 50 per cent less nitrate than their wild-type counterparts. The set-up of a functional complementation assay relying on transient expression of AtClCa cDNA in the mutant background opens the way for studies on structure–function relationships of the AtClCa nitrate transporter. Such studies will reveal whether important structural determinants identified in bacterial or mammalian CLCs are also crucial for AtClCa transport activity and regulation.
FEBS Letters | 2007
Alexis De Angeli; Sébastien Thomine; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Geneviève Ephritikhine; Franco Gambale; Hélène Barbier-Brygoo
Anion channels/transporters appear as key players in signaling pathways leading to the adaptation of plant cells to abiotic and biotic environmental stresses, in the control of metabolism and in the maintenance of electrochemical gradients. Focusing on the most recent advances, this review aims at providing a description of the role of these channels in various physiological functions such as control of stomatal movements, plant–pathogen interaction, xylem loading, compartmentalization of metabolites and coupling with proton gradients. These functions have been demonstrated by a combination of electrophysiology, pharmacology and genetics approaches, the key issue being to identify the corresponding proteins and genes.
FEBS Letters | 1996
Alain Vian; Chantal Henry-Vian; Rodolphe Schantz; Gérard Ledoigt; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Marie-Odile Desbiez; Jean-Louis Julien
In Bidens pilosa (cv. radiata), a non‐injurious stimulus induces a local and transient change in membrane potential, and an injurious stimulus induces a transmitted electrical signal described as the combination of an action potential and a slow wave. We have studied calmodulin gene expression after these stimuli. When the stimulus is non‐injurious, calmodulin mRNA accumulation is only increased in the stimulated region. In contrast, when the stimulus is injurious, mRNA accumulation takes place in both wounded and distant, unwounded tissue. We propose that the slow wave plays a role in the long‐distance transmission of a wound‐induced information in plants.
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 1998
Sabine Zimmermann; Jean-Marie Frachisse; Sébastien Thomine; Hélène Barbier-Brygoo; Jean Guern
Abstract Membrane depolarization associated with changes in transmembrane cation and anion effluxes constitute early events in the signalling cascades which mediate elicitor-induced defense reactions in plant cells. The aim of the present study is to investigate whether membrane depolarization can be a key step in the signalling cascade by triggering the opening of voltage-dependent anion channels which would mediate anion effluxes. To address this question, tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum cv. Xanthi) cells were subjected to three elicitors (pectolyase, oligogalacturonides and cryptogein) and four other depolarizing agents (vanadate, azide, cyanide and CCCP) and their plasma membrane potential was monitored. In parallel, chloride effluxes induced by these treatments were quantified. Membrane depolarizations induced by the three elicitors were of similar extent, but the intensity of elicitor-induced chloride effluxes was markedly different, pectolyase being the most potent inducer and oligogalacturonides the less active ones. The tested depolarizing agents were all as active as elicitors in terms of membrane depolarization, but again displayed very different efficiencies in the induction of chloride effluxes. The sensitivity of chloride effluxes induced by pectolyase and vanadate to several anion channel blockers was studied. The following sequence of efficiency was found: NPPB (nitrophenyl-propylamino-benzoic-acid) > 9-AC (anthracene-9-carboxylic acid) > DIDS (4,4′-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid) > ETH (ethacrinic acid). The sole anion channel described up to now in tobacco cells is the plasma membrane channel TSAC (tobacco suspension anion channel). Reinvestigations of its properties in the light of the results described above suggest that this depolarization-activated channel may be a candidate to play a role in elicitation and signalling processes accompanied by membrane depolarizations.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2014
Rémi Peyronnet; Daniel Tran; Tiffanie Girault; Jean-Marie Frachisse
Plants, like other organisms, are facing multiple mechanical constraints generated both in their tissues and by the surrounding environments. They need to sense and adapt to these forces throughout their lifetimes. To do so, different mechanisms devoted to force transduction have emerged. Here we focus on fascinating proteins: the mechanosensitive (MS) channels. Mechanosensing in plants has been described for centuries but the molecular identification of MS channels occurred only recently. This review is aimed at plant biologists and plant biomechanists who want to be introduced to MS channel identity, how they work and what they might do in planta? In this review, electrophysiological properties, regulations, and functions of well-characterized MS channels belonging to bacteria and animals are compared with those of plants. Common and specific properties are discussed. We deduce which tools and concepts from animal and bacterial fields could be helpful for improving our understanding of plant mechanotransduction. MS channels embedded in their plasma membrane are sandwiched between the cell wall and the cytoskeleton. The consequences of this peculiar situation are analyzed and discussed. We also stress how important it is to probe mechanical forces at cellular and subcellular levels in planta in order to reveal the intimate relationship linking the membrane with MS channel activity. Finally we will propose new tracks to help to reveal their physiological functions at tissue and plant levels.