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Dive into the research topics where Julia Chamot-Rooke is active.

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Featured researches published by Julia Chamot-Rooke.


Science | 2011

Posttranslational modification of pili upon cell contact triggers N. meningitidis dissemination.

Julia Chamot-Rooke; Guillain Mikaty; Christian Malosse; Magali Soyer; Audrey Dumont; Joseph Gault; Anne-Flore Imhaus; Patricia Martin; Mikael Trellet; Guilhem Clary; Philippe Chafey; Luc Camoin; Michael Nilges; Xavier Nassif; Guillaume Duménil

Regulated deaggregation allows meningitis-causing bacteria to propagate to new host cells and migrate across epithelia. The Gram-negative bacterium Neisseria meningitidis asymptomatically colonizes the throat of 10 to 30% of the human population, but throat colonization can also act as the port of entry to the blood (septicemia) and then the brain (meningitis). Colonization is mediated by filamentous organelles referred to as type IV pili, which allow the formation of bacterial aggregates associated with host cells. We found that proliferation of N. meningitidis in contact with host cells increased the transcription of a bacterial gene encoding a transferase that adds phosphoglycerol onto type IV pili. This unusual posttranslational modification specifically released type IV pili-dependent contacts between bacteria. In turn, this regulated detachment process allowed propagation of the bacterium to new colonization sites and also migration across the epithelium, a prerequisite for dissemination and invasive disease.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

IRMPD spectroscopy shows that AGG forms an oxazolone b2+ ion.

Sung Hwan Yoon; Julia Chamot-Rooke; Brittany R. Perkins; Amy E. Hilderbrand; John C. Poutsma; Vicki H. Wysocki

Infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy combined with theoretical vibrational spectra provides a powerful tool for probing structure. This technique has been used to probe the structure of protonated cyclic AG and the b(2)(+) ion from AGG. The experimental spectrum for protonated cyclo AG compares very well with the theoretical spectra for a diketopiperazine. The spectrum corresponds best to a combination of two structures protonation at the alanine and glycine amide oxygens. The experimental spectrum for the b(2)(+) ion from protonated AGG matches best to the theoretical spectrum for an oxazolone structure protonated on the ring nitrogen. In particular, the carbonyl stretching band at 1970 cm(-1) is blue-shifted by approximately 200 cm(-1) compared to the experimental spectrum for protonated cAG, indicating that these two structures are distinct. This is the first time that an IRPD spectrum of a b(2)(+) ion has been obtained and, for this ion, the oxazolone structure proposed based on prior calculations and experiments is confirmed by the spectroscopic method.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Evidence of diketopiperazine and oxazolone structures for HA b2+ ion.

Brittany R. Perkins; Julia Chamot-Rooke; Sung Hwan Yoon; Ashley C. Gucinski; Árpád Somogyi; Vicki H. Wysocki

Peptide fragmentation can lead to an oxazolone or diketopiperazine b(2)(+) ion structure. IRMPD spectroscopy combined with computational modeling and gas-phase H/D exchange was used to study the structure of the b(2)(+) ion from protonated HAAAA. The experimental spectrum of the b(2)(+) ion matches both the experimental spectrum for the protonated cyclic dipeptide HA (a commercial diketopiperazine) and the theoretical spectrum for a diketopiperazine protonated at the imidazole pi nitrogen. A characteristic band at 1875 cm(-1) and increased abundance of the peaks at 1619 and 1683 cm(-1) indicate a second population corresponding to an oxazolone species. H/D exchange also shows a mixture of two populations consistent with a mixture of b(2)(+) ion diketopiperazine and oxazolone structures.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

A Type IV Pilus Mediates DNA Binding during Natural Transformation in Streptococcus pneumoniae

Raphaël Laurenceau; Gérard Pehau-Arnaudet; Sonia Baconnais; Joseph Gault; Christian Malosse; Annick Dujeancourt; Nathalie Campo; Julia Chamot-Rooke; Eric Le Cam; Jean-Pierre Claverys; Rémi Fronzes

Natural genetic transformation is widely distributed in bacteria and generally occurs during a genetically programmed differentiated state called competence. This process promotes genome plasticity and adaptability in Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Transformation requires the binding and internalization of exogenous DNA, the mechanisms of which are unclear. Here, we report the discovery of a transformation pilus at the surface of competent Streptococcus pneumoniae cells. This Type IV-like pilus, which is primarily composed of the ComGC pilin, is required for transformation. We provide evidence that it directly binds DNA and propose that the transformation pilus is the primary DNA receptor on the bacterial cell during transformation in S. pneumoniae. Being a central component of the transformation apparatus, the transformation pilus enables S. pneumoniae, a major Gram-positive human pathogen, to acquire resistance to antibiotics and to escape vaccines through the binding and incorporation of new genetic material.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Alternative Neisseria spp. type IV pilin glycosylation with a glyceramido acetamido trideoxyhexose residue.

Julia Chamot-Rooke; Benoit Rousseau; Fanny Lanternier; Guillain Mikaty; Emilie Mairey; Christian Malosse; Guy Bouchoux; Vladimir Pelicic; Luc Camoin; Xavier Nassif; Guillaume Duménil

The importance of protein glycosylation in the interaction of pathogenic bacteria with their host is becoming increasingly clear. Neisseria meningitidis, the etiological agent of cerebrospinal meningitis, crosses cellular barriers after adhering to host cells through type IV pili. Pilin glycosylation genes (pgl) are responsible for the glycosylation of PilE, the major subunit of type IV pili, with the 2,4-diacetamido-2,4,6-trideoxyhexose residue. Nearly half of the clinical isolates, however, display an insertion in the pglBCD operon, which is anticipated to lead to a different, unidentified glycosylation. Here the structure of pilin glycosylation was determined in such a strain by “top-down” MS approaches. MALDI-TOF, nanoelectrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance, and nanoelectrospray ionization quadrupole TOF MS analysis of purified pili preparations originating from N. meningitidis strains, either wild type or deficient for pilin glycosylation, revealed a glycan mass inconsistent with 2,4-diacetamido-2,4,6-trideoxyhexose or any sugar in the databases. This unusual modification was determined by in-source dissociation of the sugar from the protein followed by tandem MS analysis with collision-induced fragmentation to be a hexose modified with a glyceramido and an acetamido group. We further show genetically that the nature of the sugar present on the pilin is determined by the carboxyl-terminal region of the pglB gene modified by the insertion in the pglBCD locus. We thus report a previously undiscovered monosaccharide involved in posttranslational modification of type IV pilin subunits by a MS-based approach and determine the molecular basis of its biosynthesis.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2014

Proteomic Analysis of Intact Flagella of Procyclic Trypanosoma brucei Cells Identifies Novel Flagellar Proteins with Unique Sub-localization and Dynamics

Ines Subota; Daria Julkowska; Laetitia Vincensini; Nele Reeg; Johanna Buisson; Thierry Blisnick; Diego Huet; Sylvie Perrot; Julien Santi-Rocca; Magalie Duchateau; Véronique Hourdel; Jean-Claude Rousselle; Nadège Cayet; Abdelkader Namane; Julia Chamot-Rooke; Philippe Bastin

Cilia and flagella are complex organelles made of hundreds of proteins of highly variable structures and functions. Here we report the purification of intact flagella from the procyclic stage of Trypanosoma brucei using mechanical shearing. Structural preservation was confirmed by transmission electron microscopy that showed that flagella still contained typical elements such as the membrane, the axoneme, the paraflagellar rod, and the intraflagellar transport particles. It also revealed that flagella severed below the basal body, and were not contaminated by other cytoskeletal structures such as the flagellar pocket collar or the adhesion zone filament. Mass spectrometry analysis identified a total of 751 proteins with high confidence, including 88% of known flagellar components. Comparison with the cell debris fraction revealed that more than half of the flagellum markers were enriched in flagella and this enrichment criterion was taken into account to identify 212 proteins not previously reported to be associated to flagella. Nine of these were experimentally validated including a 14-3-3 protein not yet reported to be associated to flagella and eight novel proteins termed FLAM (FLAgellar Member). Remarkably, they localized to five different subdomains of the flagellum. For example, FLAM6 is restricted to the proximal half of the axoneme, no matter its length. In contrast, FLAM8 is progressively accumulating at the distal tip of growing flagella and half of it still needs to be added after cell division. A combination of RNA interference and Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching approaches demonstrated very different dynamics from one protein to the other, but also according to the stage of construction and the age of the flagellum. Structural proteins are added to the distal tip of the elongating flagellum and exhibit slow turnover whereas membrane proteins such as the arginine kinase show rapid turnover without a detectible polarity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Structure of Electron-Capture Dissociation Fragments from Charge-Tagged Peptides Probed by Tunable Infrared Multiple Photon Dissociation

Gilles Frison; Guillaume van der Rest; František Tureček; Thierry Besson; Joël Lemaire; Philippe Maitre; Julia Chamot-Rooke

In this study, we propose the first spectroscopic structural characterization of c-type ions produced by ECD of a peptide. The structure of c-type ions formed by electron capture dissociation and the overall mechanism leading to their formation are still a question of debate. Depending on the mechanism, c-type ions have been proposed to have either an enol-imine structure (-C(OH)NH) or an amide one (-C(O)-NH2). Since these ions are isomeric, mass spectrometry only cannot discriminate between them, but infrared spectroscopy can bring experimental evidence and help determine which scheme is operative. Using the coupling between a tunable free electron laser and a FT-ICR mass spectrometer, we show that c-type ions have an amide structure, characterized by an IR signature of the C=O stretch at 1731 cm(-1). This result is particularly interesting from the perspective of the elucidation of the ECD mechanism.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012

Assigning structures to gas-phase peptide cations and cation-radicals. An infrared multiphoton dissociation, ion mobility, electron transfer, and computational study of a histidine peptide ion.

Christopher L. Moss; Julia Chamot-Rooke; Edith Nicol; Jeffery Mark Brown; Iain Campuzano; Keith Richardson; Jonathan P. Williams; Matthew F. Bush; Benjamin J. Bythell; Béla Paizs; František Tureček

Infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy, using a free-electron laser, and ion mobility measurements, using both drift-cell and traveling-wave instruments, were used to investigate the structure of gas-phase peptide (AAHAL + 2H)(2+) ions produced by electrospray ionization. The experimental data from the IRMPD spectra and collisional cross section (Ω) measurements were consistent with the respective infrared spectra and Ω calculated for the lowest-energy peptide ion conformer obtained by extensive molecular dynamics searches and combined density functional theory and ab initio geometry optimizations and energy calculations. Traveling-wave ion mobility measurements were employed to obtain the Ω of charge-reduced peptide cation-radicals, (AAHAL + 2H)(+●), and the c(3), c(4), z(3), and z(4) fragments from electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) of (AAHAL + 2H)(2+). The experimental Ω for the ETD charge-reduced and fragment ions were consistent with the values calculated for fully optimized ion structures and indicated that the ions retained specific hydrogen bonding motifs from the precursor ion. In particular, the Ω for the doubly protonated ions and charge-reduced cation-radicals were nearly identical, indicating negligible unfolding and small secondary structure changes upon electron transfer. The experimental Ω for the (AAHAL + 2H)(+●) cation-radicals were compatible with both zwitterionic and histidine radical structures formed by electron attachment to different sites in the precursor ion, but did not allow their distinction. The best agreement with the experimental Ω was found for ion structures fully optimized with M06-2X/6-31+G(d,p) and using both projection approximation and trajectory methods to calculate the theoretical Ω values.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2010

Isolation and pharmacological characterization of AdTx1, a natural peptide displaying specific insurmountable antagonism of the α1A-adrenoceptor

Loïc Quinton; Emmanuelle Girard; Arhamatoulaye Maïga; Moez Rekik; Philippe Lluel; Geoffrey Masuyer; M. Larregola; Catherine Marquer; Justyna Ciolek; T. Magnin; R. Wagner; Jordi Molgó; Robert Thai; Carole Fruchart-Gaillard; Gilles Mourier; Julia Chamot-Rooke; André Ménez; Stefano Palea; Denis Servent; Nicolas Gilles

Background and purpose:  Venoms are a rich source of ligands for ion channels, but very little is known about their capacity to modulate G‐protein coupled receptor (GPCR) activity. We developed a strategy to identify novel toxins targeting GPCRs.


Nature | 2017

Structure and allosteric inhibition of excitatory amino acid transporter 1

Juan Carlos Canul-Tec; Reda Assal; Erica Cirri; Pierre Legrand; Sébastien Brier; Julia Chamot-Rooke; Nicolas Reyes

Human members of the solute carrier 1 (SLC1) family of transporters take up excitatory neurotransmitters in the brain and amino acids in peripheral organs. Dysregulation of their functions is associated to neurodegenerative disorders and cancer. Here we present the first crystal structures of a thermostabilized human SLC1 transporter, the excitatory amino acid transporter 1 (EAAT1), with and without allosteric and competitive inhibitors bound. The structures show novel architectural features of the human transporters, including intra- and extracellular domains with potential roles in transport function, as well as regulation by lipids and post-translational modifications. The coordination of the inhibitor in the structures and the change in the transporter dynamics measured by hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry, reveal an allosteric mechanism of inhibition, whereby the transporter is locked in the outward-facing states of the transport cycle. Our results provide unprecedented insights into the molecular mechanisms of function and pharmacology of human SLC1 transporters.

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