Josette Gagnat
University of Paris-Sud
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Featured researches published by Josette Gagnat.
Gene | 1989
Jean-Luc Pernodet; Frédéric Boccard; Maria-Teresa Alegre; Josette Gagnat; Michel Guerineau
The Streptomyces ambofaciens genome contains four rRNA gene clusters. These copies are called rrnA, B, C and D. The complete nucleotide (nt) sequence of rrnD has been determined. These genes possess striking similarity with other eubacterial rRNA genes. Comparison with other rRNA sequences allowed the putative localization of the sequences encoding mature rRNAs. The structural genes are arranged in the order 16S-23S-5S and are tightly linked. The mature rRNAs are predicted to contain 1528, 3120 and 120 nt, for the 16S, 23S and 5S rRNAs, respectively. The 23S rRNA is, to our knowledge, the longest of all sequenced prokaryotic 23S rRNAs. When compared to other large rRNAs it shows insertions at positions where they are also present in archaebacterial and in eukaryotic large rRNAs. Secondary structure models of S. ambofaciens rRNAs are proposed, based upon those existing for other bacterial rRNAs. Positions of putative transcription start points and of a termination signal are suggested. The corresponding putative primary transcript, containing the 16S, 23S and 5S rRNAs plus flanking regions, was folded into a secondary structure, and sequences possibly involved in rRNA maturation are described. The G + C content of the rRNA gene cluster is low (57%) compared with the overall G + C content of Streptomyces DNA (73%).
Molecular Microbiology | 2008
Christophe Possoz; Carin Ribard; Josette Gagnat; Jean-Luc Pernodet; Michel Guerineau
pSAM2 is an 11 kb integrative element from Streptomyces ambofaciens that is capable of conjugal transfer. A system based on differential DNA modification by SalI methyltransferase was used to localize pSAM2 in the donor or recipient strain, and thus to determine the various steps associated with transfer. Initiation (i.e. excision and replication of pSAM2 in the donor) occurs a few hours after mating with a recipient strain. pSAM2 replicates in the recipient strain, spreads within the mycelium and then integrates into the chromosome. Transfer generally involves single‐stranded DNA. In Streptomyces, only a few genes, such as traSA for pSAM2, are required for conjugal transfer. Using the differential sensitivity to the SalI restriction–modification system of transfers involving single‐ and double‐stranded DNA, we found that pSAM2 was probably transferred to the recipient as double‐stranded DNA. This provides the first experimental evidence for the transfer of double‐stranded DNA during bacterial conjugation. Thus, TraSA, involved in pSAM2 transfer, and SpoIIIE, which is involved in chromosome partitioning in Bacillus subtilis, display similarities in both sequence and function: both seem to transport double‐stranded DNA actively, either from donor to recipient or from mother cell to prespore.
Microbiology | 1994
Marie-Joelle Virolle; Josette Gagnat
In glycerol-grown, but not in glucose-grown cultures, expression in Streptomyces lividans TK24 of the cloned alpha-amylase gene (aml) of Streptomyces limosus is switched on toward the end of exponential growth. During this period, aml expression is further inducible by maltotriose. We showed that a 378 bp fragment, extending from position -204 through to +174 (relative to the transcriptional start site), included cis-acting sequences involved in aml regulation. When this fragment was present on a multicopy plasmid, the growth-phase-dependent aml expression conferred by a DNA fragment cloned on a compatible low-copy-number plasmid was greatly enhanced, as if negative regulators were being titrated. A study of the regulation of aml expression in variants with deletions in the aml promoter region indicated that a direct repeat (DR) between positions -124 and -106 (relative to the transcriptional start site) and an inverted repeat (IR) between positions +9 and +24 were good candidates for secondary and primary operator sites, respectively. Deletion of a 29 bp fragment containing the IR rendered aml expression partly growth-phase-independent, resistant to glucose repression, and insensitive to maltotriose induction.
Gene | 1987
Jean-Marc Simonet; Frédéric Boccard; Jean-Luc Pernodet; Josette Gagnat; Michel Guerineau
When Streptomyces ambofaciens OSF was crossed with the plasmid-free Streptomyces lividans TK24, almost all S. lividans exconjugants contained the free 11.1-kb plasmid pOS1. Southern hybridizations showed that pOS1 was derived from the integrated copy of previously recognized plasmid pSAM2 present in strain OSF. A shorter derivative of pOS1 was constructed carrying the tsr gene in a non-essential region, and this pOS7 plasmid was used in transformation experiments with protoplasts of S. ambofaciens ATCC23877 (containing pSAM2 only as an integrated sequence) and S. ambofaciens DSM40697 (devoid of pSAM2-related forms). In both cases, some clones carrying pOS7 in an integrated state were found. Integration into strain ATCC23877 was into the pre-existing integrated copy of pSAM2. In contrast, plasmid pOS7 integrated through specific plasmidic and chromosomal sites into strain DSM40697. Thus it is probable that pSAM2 integrates by interaction between preferred regions of the plasmid and host genomes.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2010
Fatma Karray; Emmanuelle Darbon; Hoang Chuong Nguyen; Josette Gagnat; Jean-Luc Pernodet
Streptomyces ambofaciens synthesizes the macrolide antibiotic spiramycin. The biosynthetic gene cluster for spiramycin has been characterized for S. ambofaciens. In addition to the regulatory gene srmR (srm22), previously identified (M. Geistlich et al., Mol. Microbiol. 6:2019-2029, 1992), three putative regulatory genes had been identified by sequence analysis. Gene expression analysis and gene inactivation experiments showed that only one of these three genes, srm40, plays a major role in the regulation of spiramycin biosynthesis. The disruption of srm22 or srm40 eliminated spiramycin production while their overexpression increased spiramycin production. Expression analysis was performed by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) for all the genes of the cluster in the wild-type strain and in the srm22 (srmR) and srm40 deletion mutants. The results from the expression analysis, together with the ones from the complementation experiments, indicated that Srm22 is required for srm40 expression, Srm40 being a pathway-specific activator that controls most, if not all, of the spiramycin biosynthetic genes.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2010
Hoang Chuong Nguyen; Fatma Karray; Sylvie Lautru; Josette Gagnat; Ahmed Lebrihi; Thuy Duong Ho Huynh; Jean-Luc Pernodet
ABSTRACT Streptomyces ambofaciens synthesizes spiramycin, a 16-membered macrolide antibiotic used in human medicine. The spiramycin molecule consists of a polyketide lactone ring (platenolide) synthesized by a type I polyketide synthase, to which three deoxyhexoses (mycaminose, forosamine, and mycarose) are attached successively in this order. These sugars are essential to the antibacterial activity of spiramycin. We previously identified four genes in the spiramycin biosynthetic gene cluster predicted to encode glycosyltransferases. We individually deleted each of these four genes and showed that three of them were required for spiramycin biosynthesis. The role of each of the three glycosyltransferases in spiramycin biosynthesis was determined by identifying the biosynthetic intermediates accumulated by the corresponding mutant strains. This led to the identification of the glycosyltransferase responsible for the attachment of each of the three sugars. Moreover, two genes encoding putative glycosyltransferase auxiliary proteins were also identified in the spiramycin biosynthetic gene cluster. When these two genes were deleted, one of them was found to be dispensable for spiramycin biosynthesis. However, analysis of the biosynthetic intermediates accumulated by mutant strains devoid of each of the auxiliary proteins (or of both of them), together with complementation experiments, revealed the interplay of glycosyltransferases with the auxiliary proteins. One of the auxiliary proteins interacted efficiently with the two glycosyltransferases transferring mycaminose and forosamine while the other auxiliary protein interacted only with the mycaminosyltransferase.
Molecular Microbiology | 2003
Christophe Possoz; Josette Gagnat; Guennadi Sezonov; Michel Guerineau; Jean-Luc Pernodet
Mechanisms of conjugal immunity preventing redundant exchange between two cells harbouring the same conjugative element have been reported in diverse bacteria. Such a system does exist for pSAM2, a conjugative and integrative element of Streptomyces. The apparition of the conjugative free form of pSAM2 in the donor strain during mating can be considered as the initial step of transfer. We analysed the genes involved in transfer inhibition by mating donors harbouring pSAM2 with recipient strains containing different regions of pSAM2. The conjugal immunity was previously thought to be mediated by the transcriptional repressor KorSA. Although the transfer efficiency is reduced by its presence in the recipient, the initiation of the transfer process is not affected. In contrast, the presence in the recipient strain of a single pSAM2 gene, pif (pSAM2 immunity factor), was sufficient to abolish both transfer and initiation of transfer. Thus, the clustered genes korSA and pif act complementarily to maintain pSAM2 in a ‘prophage’ state under non‐conjugal conditions. KorSA is involved in intracellular signalling, whereas Pif participates in intercellular signalling. The Pif nudix motif is essential for its activity. This is the first protein of the nudix family shown to be involved in bacterial conjugation.
Microbiology | 1999
Josette Gagnat; Hichem Chouayekh; Claude Gerbaud; François Francou; Marie-Joelle Virolle
In a transposition mutant of Streptomyces lividans TK24, the usually glucose-repressible expression of a heterologous alpha-amylase gene (aml) became resistant to glucose repression. The transposon had inserted into an ORF called sblA which encodes a 274 aa product sharing significant sequence similarities with various phosphatases that act on small phosphorylated substrates. sblA was transcribed as a monocistronic mRNA and its transcription was enhanced at the transition phase. Because its transcriptional and putative translational start points coincide, sblA is likely to be translated in the absence of a conventional RBS. The sblA-disrupted mutant is characterized by early growth arrest in glucose-grown cultures and by partial relief of glucose repression of aml expression.In a transposition mutant of Streptomyces lividans TK24, the usually glucose-repressible expression of a heterologous α-amylase gene (aml) became resistant to glucose repression. The transposon had inserted into an ORF called sblA which encodes a 274 aa product sharing significant sequence similarities with various phosphatases that act on small phosphorylated substrates. sblA was transcribed as a monocistronic mRNA and its transcription was enhanced at the transition phase. Because its transcriptional and putative translational start points coincide, sblA is likely to be translated in the absence of a conventional RBS. The sblA-disrupted mutant is characterized by early growth arrest in glucose-grown cultures and by partial relief of glucose repression of aml expression.
Microbiology | 2007
Fatma Karray; Emmanuelle Darbon; Nathalie Oestreicher; Hélène Dominguez; Karine Tuphile; Josette Gagnat; Marie-Hélène Blondelet-Rouault; Claude Gerbaud; Jean-Luc Pernodet
Gene | 1997
Xi-Hou Yin; Josette Gagnat; Claude Gerbaud; Michel Guerineau; Marie-Joelle Virolle