Joëlle Bigay
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Joëlle Bigay.
FEBS Letters | 1985
Joëlle Bigay; Philippe Deterre; Claude Pfister; Marc Chabre
Fluoride activation of the cGMP cascade of vision requires the presence of aluminum, and is shown to be mediated by the binding of one AlF‐4 to the GDP/GTP‐binding subunit of transducin. The presence of GDP in the site is required: AlF4 − is ineffective when the site is empty or when GDPßS is substituted for GDP. This sensitivity to the sulfur of GDPßS suggests that AlF4 − is in contact with the GDP. Striking structural similarities between AlF4 − and PO4 −1 lead us to propose that AlF4 − mimics the role of the γ‐phosphate of GTP.
The EMBO Journal | 1987
Joëlle Bigay; P Deterre; Pfister C; Marc Chabre
Fluoride activation of G proteins requires the presence of aluminium or beryllium and it has been suggested that AIF4‐ acts as an analogue of the gamma‐phosphate of GTP in the nucleotide site. We have investigated the action of AIF4‐ or of BeF3‐ on transducin (T), the G protein of the retinal rods, either indirectly through the activation of cGMP phosphodiesterase, or more directly through their effects on the conformation of transducin itself. In the presence of AIF4‐ or BeF3‐, purified T alpha subunit of transducin activates purified cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase (PDE) in the absence of photoactivated rhodopsin. Activation is totally reversed by elution of fluoride or partially reversed by addition of excess T beta gamma. Activation requires that GDP or a suitable analogue be bound to T alpha: T alpha‐GDP and T alpha‐GDP alpha S are activable by fluorides, but not T alpha‐GDP beta S, nor T alpha that has released its nucleotide upon binding to photoexcited rhodopsin. Analysis of previous works on other G proteins and with other nucleotide analogues confirm that in all cases fluoride activation requires that a GDP unsubstituted at its beta phosphate be bound in T alpha. By contrast with alumino‐fluoride complexes, which can adopt various coordination geometries, all beryllium fluoride complexes are tetracoordinated, with a Be‐F bond length of 1.55 A, and strictly isomorphous to a phosphate group. Our study confirms that fluoride activation of transducin results from a reversible binding of the metal‐fluoride complex in the nucleotide site of T alpha, next to the beta phosphate of GDP, as an analogue of the gamma phosphate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Nature | 2003
Joëlle Bigay; Pierre Gounon; Sylviane Robineau; Bruno Antonny
Protein coats deform flat lipid membranes into buds and capture membrane proteins to form transport vesicles. The assembly/disassembly cycle of the COPI coat on Golgi membranes is coupled to the GTP/GDP cycle of the small G protein Arf1. At the heart of this coupling is the specific interaction of membrane-bound Arf1–GTP with coatomer, a complex of seven proteins that forms the building unit of the COPI coat. Although COPI coat disassembly requires the catalysis of GTP hydrolysis in Arf1 by a specific GTPase-activating protein (ArfGAP1), the precise timing of this reaction during COPI vesicle formation is not known. Using time-resolved assays for COPI dynamics on liposomes of controlled size, we show that the rate of ArfGAP1-catalysed GTP hydrolysis in Arf1 and the rate of COPI disassembly increase over two orders of magnitude as the curvature of the lipid bilayer increases and approaches that of a typical transport vesicle. This leads to a model for COPI dynamics in which GTP hydrolysis in Arf1 is organized temporally and spatially according to the changes in lipid packing induced by the coat.
Cell | 2013
Bruno Mesmin; Joëlle Bigay; Joachim Moser von Filseck; Sandra Lacas-Gervais; Guillaume Drin; Bruno Antonny
Several proteins at endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-Golgi membrane contact sites contain a PH domain that interacts with the Golgi phosphoinositide PI(4)P, a FFAT motif that interacts with the ER protein VAP-A, and a lipid transfer domain. This architecture suggests the ability to both tether organelles and transport lipids between them. We show that in oxysterol binding protein (OSBP) these two activities are coupled by a four-step cycle. Membrane tethering by the PH domain and the FFAT motif enables sterol transfer by the lipid transfer domain (ORD), followed by back transfer of PI(4)P by the ORD. Finally, PI(4)P is hydrolyzed in cis by the ER protein Sac1. The energy provided by PI(4)P hydrolysis drives sterol transfer and allows negative feedback when PI(4)P becomes limiting. Other lipid transfer proteins are tethered by the same mechanism. Thus, OSBP-mediated back transfer of PI(4)P might coordinate the transfer of other lipid species at the ER-Golgi interface.
The EMBO Journal | 2005
Joëlle Bigay; Jean-François Casella; Guillaume Drin; Bruno Mesmin; Bruno Antonny
ArfGAP1 promotes GTP hydrolysis in Arf1, a small G protein that interacts with lipid membranes and drives the assembly of the COPI coat in a GTP‐dependent manner. The activity of ArfGAP1 increases with membrane curvature, suggesting a negative feedback loop in which COPI‐induced membrane deformation determines the timing and location of GTP hydrolysis within a coated bud. Here we show that a central sequence of about 40 amino acids in ArfGAP1 acts as a lipid‐packing sensor. This ALPS motif (ArfGAP1 Lipid Packing Sensor) is also found in the yeast homologue Gcs1p and is necessary for coupling ArfGAP1 activity with membrane curvature. The ALPS motif binds avidly to small liposomes and shows the same hypersensitivity on liposome radius as full‐length ArfGAP1. Site‐directed mutagenesis, limited proteolysis and circular dichroism experiments suggest that the ALPS motif, which is unstructured in solution, inserts bulky hydrophobic residues between loosely packed lipids and forms an amphipathic helix on highly curved membranes. This helix differs from classical amphipathic helices by the abundance of serine and threonine residues on its polar face.
Developmental Cell | 2012
Joëlle Bigay; Bruno Antonny
Whereas some rare lipids contribute to the identity of cell organelles, we focus on the abundant lipids that form the matrix of organelle membranes. Observations using bioprobes and peripheral proteins, notably sensors of membrane curvature, support the prediction that the cell contains two broad membrane territories: the territory of loose lipid packing, where cytosolic proteins take advantage of membrane defects, and the territory of electrostatics, where proteins are attracted by negatively charged lipids. The contrasting features of these territories provide specificity for reactions occurring along the secretory pathway, on the plasma membrane, and also on lipid droplets and autophagosomes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Sonia Paris; Sophie Béraud-Dufour; Sylviane Robineau; Joëlle Bigay; Bruno Antonny; Marc Chabre; Pierre Chardin
Arno is a 47-kDa human protein recently identified as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for ADP ribosylation factor 1 (ARF1) with a central Sec7 domain responsible for the exchange activity and a carboxyl-terminal pleckstrin homology (PH) domain (Chardin, P., Paris, S., Antonny, B., Robineau, S., Béraud-Dufour, S., Jackson, C. L., and Chabre, M. (1996)Nature 384, 481–484). Binding of the PH domain to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) greatly enhances Arno-mediated activation of myristoylated ARF1. We show here that in the absence of phospholipids, Arno promotes nucleotide exchange on [Δ17]ARF1, a soluble mutant of ARF1 lacking the first 17 amino acids. This reaction is unaffected by PIP2, which suggests that the PIP2-PH domain interaction does not directly regulate the catalytic activity of Arno but rather serves to recruit Arno to membranes. Arno catalyzes the release of GDP more efficiently than that of GTP from [Δ17]ARF1, and a stable complex between Arno Sec7 domain and nucleotide-free [Δ17]ARF1 can be isolated. In contrast to [Δ17]ARF1, full-length unmyristoylated ARF1 is not readily activated by Arno in solution. Its activation requires the presence of phospholipids and a reduction of ionic strength and Mg2+ concentration. PIP2 is strongly stimulatory, indicating that binding of Arno to phospholipids is involved, but in addition, electrostatic interactions between phospholipids and the amino-terminal portion of unmyristoylated ARF1GDP seem to be important. We conclude that efficient activation of full-length ARF1 by Arno requires a membrane surface and two distinct protein-phospholipid interactions: one between the PH domain of Arno and PIP2, and the other between amino-terminal cationic residues of ARF1 and anionic phospholipids. The latter interaction is normally induced by insertion of the amino-terminal myristate into the bilayer but can also be artificially facilitated by decreasing Mg2+ and salt concentrations.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2011
Iwona M. Pranke; Vincent Morello; Joëlle Bigay; Kimberley Gibson; Jean-Marc Verbavatz; Bruno Antonny; Catherine L. Jackson
Two membrane curvature–sensing molecules with opposite chemistries are targeted to distinct vesicle classes through direct interaction with different lipid environments.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996
Frédérique Gaits; Ruo Ya Li; Joëlle Bigay; Ashraf Ragab; Jeannie Ragab-Thomas; Hugues Chap
SH-PTP1 is a protein-tyrosine phosphatase preferentially expressed in hematopoietic cells and bearing two SH2 (rc homology-2) domains. In the human megakaryocytic cell line Dami, lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) promoted a rapid increase in SH-PTP1 phosphorylation on both serine and tyrosine residues. Only tyrosine phosphorylation was significantly inhibited by pertussis toxin and by the protein kinase C inhibitor GF109203X. Moreover, SH-PTP1 was phosphorylated upon challenge with other agonists acting via G-protein-coupled receptors such as α-thrombin, epinephrine, and ADP, whereas the closely related protein-tyrosine phosphatase SH-PTP2 failed to share such a regulation in Dami cells. We developed an in vitro assay that reproduced LPA-dependent phosphorylation of SH-PTP1 in a cell-free system. The fusion protein glutathione S-transferase-β-adrenergic receptor kinase 1-(495-689) or the transducin subunit Gαt-GDP, which act as specific antagonists of Gβγ, inhibited SH-PTP1 phosphorylation. Moreover, purified transducin Gβγ subunits mimicked the effect of LPA. Finally, stable expression of β-adrenergic receptor kinase 1-(495-689) in Dami cells resulted in the inhibition of SH-PTP1 phosphorylation evoked by LPA. Our data thus identify SH-PTP1 as a specific target of protein kinases linked to G-protein-coupled receptors via Gβγ subunits.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2008
Lena Kliouchnikov; Joëlle Bigay; Bruno Mesmin; Anna Parnis; Moran Rawet; Noga Goldfeder; Bruno Antonny; Dan Cassel
From yeast to mammals, two types of GTPase-activating proteins, ArfGAP1 and ArfGAP2/3, control guanosine triphosphate (GTP) hydrolysis on the small G protein ADP-ribosylation factor (Arf) 1 at the Golgi apparatus. Although functionally interchangeable, they display little similarity outside the catalytic GTPase-activating protein (GAP) domain, suggesting differential regulation. ArfGAP1 is controlled by membrane curvature through its amphipathic lipid packing sensor motifs, whereas Golgi targeting of ArfGAP2 depends on coatomer, the building block of the COPI coat. Using a reporter fusion approach and in vitro assays, we identified several functional elements in ArfGAP2/3. We show that the Golgi localization of ArfGAP3 depends on both a central basic stretch and a carboxy-amphipathic motif. The basic stretch interacts directly with coatomer, which we found essential for the catalytic activity of ArfGAP3 on Arf1-GTP, whereas the carboxy-amphipathic motif interacts directly with lipid membranes but has minor role in the regulation of ArfGAP3 activity. Our findings indicate that the two types of ArfGAP proteins that reside at the Golgi use a different combination of protein-protein and protein-lipid interactions to promote GTP hydrolysis in Arf1-GTP.