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Featured researches published by Julien Leclaire.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

CO2 Binding by Dynamic Combinatorial Chemistry: An Environmental Selection

Julien Leclaire; Guillaume Husson; Nathalie Devaux; Vincent Delorme; Laurence Charles; Fabio Ziarelli; Perrine Desbois; Alexandra Chaumonnot; Marc Jacquin; Frédéric Fotiadu; Gérard Buono

We now report that a dynamic combinatorial selection approach can quantitatively provide, from trivial building blocks, an architecturally complex organic material, in which carbon dioxide is reversibly but covalently incorporated as a guest with a mass content of 20%. Solid-state analyses combined with covalent disconnection and quantization of the liberated components allowed identification of a three-component monomeric unit repeated within a range of assembled oligomeric adducts whose repartition and binding capacity can be finely tuned through the starting stoichiometries. The self-assembly of these architectures occurs through the simultaneous creation of more than 25 covalent bonds per molecular entity. It appears that the thermodynamic selection is directed by the packing efficiency of these adducts, explaining the spectacular building block discrimination between homologues differing by one carbon unit. This selectivity, combined with the reversible nature of the system, provided pure molecular building blocks after a simple chemical disconnection, promoting CO(2) as a green auxiliary to purify polyaldehyde or polyamine from mixtures of homologous structures. Moreover, the gas template could be expelled as a pure compound under thermodynamic control. This cooperative desorption process yielded back the initial libraries of high molecular diversity with a promising reduction of the energetic costs of capture and recycling.


PLOS ONE | 2012

MmPPOX Inhibits Mycobacterium tuberculosis Lipolytic Enzymes Belonging to the Hormone-Sensitive Lipase Family and Alters Mycobacterial Growth

Vincent Delorme; Sadia Diomande; Luc Dedieu; Jean-François Cavalier; Frédéric Carrière; Laurent Kremer; Julien Leclaire; Frédéric Fotiadu; Stéphane Canaan

Lipid metabolism plays an important role during the lifetime of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis. Although M. tuberculosis possesses numerous lipolytic enzymes, very few have been characterized yet at a biochemical/pharmacological level. This study was devoted to the M. tuberculosis lipolytic enzymes belonging to the Hormone-Sensitive Lipase (HSL) family, which encompasses twelve serine hydrolases closely related to the human HSL. Among them, nine were expressed, purified and biochemically characterized using a broad range of substrates. In vitro enzymatic inhibition studies using the recombinant HSL proteins, combined with mass spectrometry analyses, revealed the potent inhibitory activity of an oxadiazolone compound, named MmPPOX. In addition, we provide evidence that MmPPOX alters mycobacterial growth. Overall, these findings suggest that the M. tuberculosis HSL family displays important metabolic functions, thus opening the way to further investigations linking the involvement of these enzymes in mycobacterial growth.


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Analysis of the discriminative inhibition of mammalian digestive lipases by 3-phenyl substituted 1,3,4-oxadiazol-2(3H)-ones.

Vanessa Point; K.V.P. Pavan Kumar; Sylvain Marc; Vincent Delorme; Goetz Parsiegla; Sawsan Amara; Frédéric Carrière; Gérard Buono; Frédéric Fotiadu; Stéphane Canaan; Julien Leclaire; Jean-François Cavalier

We report here the reactivity and selectivity of three 5-Methoxy-N-3-Phenyl substituted-1,3,4-Oxadiazol-2(3H)-ones (MPOX, as well as meta and para-PhenoxyPhenyl derivatives, i.e.MmPPOX and MpPPOX) with respect to the inhibition of mammalian digestive lipases: dog gastric lipase (DGL), human (HPL) and porcine (PPL) pancreatic lipases, human (HPLRP2) and guinea pig (GPLRP2) pancreatic lipase-related proteins 2, human pancreatic carboxyl ester hydrolase (hCEH), and porcine pancreatic extracts (PPE). All three oxadiazolones displayed similar inhibitory activities on DGL, PLRP2s and hCEH than the FDA-approved anti-obesity drug Orlistat towards the same enzymes. These compounds appeared however to be discriminative of HPL (poorly inhibited) and PPL (fully inhibited). The inhibitory activities obtained experimentally in vitro were further rationalized using in silico molecular docking. In the case of DGL, we demonstrated that the phenoxy group plays a key role in specific molecular interactions within the lipases active site. The absence of this group in the case of MPOX, as well as its connectivity to the neighbouring aromatic ring in the case of MmPPOX and MpPPOX, strongly impacts the inhibitory efficiency of these oxadiazolones and leads to a significant gain in selectivity towards the lipases tested. The powerful inhibition of PPL, DGL, PLRP2s, hCEH and to a lesser extend HPL, suggests that oxadiazolone derivatives could also provide useful leads for the development of novel and more discriminative inhibitors of digestive lipases. These inhibitors could be used for a better understanding of individual lipase function as well as for drug development aiming at the regulation of the whole gastrointestinal lipolysis process.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015

H-Adamantylphosphinates as Universal Precursors of P-Stereogenic Compounds

David Gatineau; Duc Hanh Nguyen; Damien Hérault; Nicolas Vanthuyne; Julien Leclaire; Laurent Giordano; Gérard Buono

A new family of H-adamantylphosphinates as universal precursors of P-stereogenic ligands was obtained in one step from commercial chlorophosphines. Both enantiomers of these air- and moisture-stable intermediates can easily be separated by semipreparative chiral HPLC on a gram scale and individually undergo stereoselective transformations to afford each enantiomer of a set of P-stereogenic compounds such as secondary phosphine oxides and boron-protected monophosphines.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

In vitro stereoselective hydrolysis of diacylglycerols by hormone-sensitive lipase.

Jorge A. Rodriguez; Yassine Ben Ali; Slim Abdelkafi; Lilia D. Mendoza; Julien Leclaire; Frédéric Fotiadu; Gerard Buono; Frédéric Carrière; Abdelkarim Abousalham

Hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) contributes importantly to the mobilization of fatty acids in adipocytes and shows a substrate preference for the diacylglycerols (DAGs) originating from triacylglycerols. To determine whether HSL shows any stereopreference during the hydrolysis of diacylglycerols, racemic 1,2(2,3)-sn-diolein was used as a substrate and the enantiomeric excess (ee%) of residual 1,2-sn-diolein over 2,3-sn-diolein was measured as a function of DAG hydrolysis. Enantiomeric DAGs were separated by performing chiral-stationary-phase HPLC after direct derivatization from lipolysis product extracts. The fact that the ee% of 1,2-sn-diolein over 2,3-sn-diolein increased with the level of hydrolysis indicated that HSL has a preference for 2,3-sn-diolein as a substrate and therefore a stereopreference for the sn-3 position of dioleoylglycerol. The ee% of 1,2-sn-diolein reached a maximum value of 36% at 42% hydrolysis. Among the various mammalian lipases tested so far, HSL is the only lipolytic carboxylester hydrolase found to have a pronounced stereospecificity for the sn-3 position of dioleoylglycerol.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2012

An ultraviolet spectrophotometric assay for the screening of sn-2-specific lipases using 1,3-O-dioleoyl-2-O-α-eleostearoyl-sn-glycerol as substrate

Lilia D. Mendoza; Jorge A. Rodriguez; Julien Leclaire; Gérard Buono; Frédéric Fotiadu; Frédéric Carrière; Abdelkarim Abousalham

In the present study, we propose a continuous assay for the screening of sn-2 lipases by using triacylglycerols (TAGs) from Aleurites fordii seed (tung oil) and a synthetic TAG containing the α-eleostearic acid at the sn-2 position and the oleic acid (OA) at the sn-1 and sn-3 positions [1,3-O-dioleoyl-2-O-α-eleostearoyl-sn-glycerol (sn-OEO)]. Each TAG was coated into a microplate well, and the lipase activity was measured by optical density increase at 272 nm due to transition of α-eleostearic acid from the adsorbed to the soluble state. The sn-1,3-regioselective lipases human pancreatic lipase (HPL), LIP2 lipase from Yarrowia lipolytica (YLLIP2), and a known sn-2 lipase, Candida antarctica lipase A (CALA) were used to validate this method. TLC analysis of lipolysis products showed that the lipases tested were able to hydrolyze the sn-OEO and the tung oil TAGs, but only CALA hydrolyzed the sn-2 position. The ratio of initial velocities on sn-OEO and tung oil TAGs was used to estimate the sn-2 preference of lipases. CALA was the enzyme with the highest ratio (0.22 ± 0.015), whereas HPL and YLLIP2 showed much lower ratios (0.072 ± 0.026 and 0.038 ± 0.016, respectively). This continuous sn-2 lipase assay is compatible with a high sample throughput and thus can be applied to the screening of sn-2 lipases.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2016

On-Demand Cyclophanes: Substituent-Directed Self-Assembling, Folding, and Binding

Pierre-Thomas Skowron; Melissa Dumartin; Emeric Jeamet; Florent Perret; Christophe Gourlaouen; Anne Baudouin; Bernard Fenet; Jean-Valère Naubron; Frédéric Fotiadu; Laurent Vial; Julien Leclaire

A family of p-cyclophanes based on bis- or tetrafunctionalized 1,4-bisthiophenol units linked by disulfide bridges was obtained by self-assembly on a gram scale and without any chromatographic purification. The nature of the functionalities borne by these so-called dyn[4]arenes plays a crucial role on their structural features as well as their molecular recognition abilities. Tuning these functions on demand yields tailored receptors for cations, anions, or zwitterions in organic or aqueous media.


Green Chemistry | 2016

Straightforward and selective metal capture through CO2-induced self-assembly

G. Poisson; G. Germain; Jean Septavaux; Julien Leclaire

A new process of rare earth metal capture employing carbon dioxide as a key component was designed and studied. Proof of the feasibility of spontaneously self-assembling into a supramolecular solid from low-cost and readily available building blocks, including rare earth metals as templates and carbon dioxide as a molecular trigger, was investigated. The process proved to be selective for rare earth metals and reversible under mild and sustainable conditions. The impacts of chemical parameters such as metal–ligand stoichiometry or concentration of the mixture were studied both on the macroscopic and microscopic level. Finally, this new molecular system was tested on bimetallic mixtures involving metals used in permanent magnets, confirming the promising aspects of the technology.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013

Bare Histidine–Serine Models: Implication and Impact of Hydrogen Bonding on Nucleophilicity

Julien Leclaire; Messaoud Mazari; Yuan Zhang; Colin Bonduelle; Olivier Thillaye du Boullay; Blanca Martin-Vaca; Didier Bourissou; Innocenzo De Riggi; Rémy Fortrie; Frédéric Fotiadu; Gérard Buono

A new family of 2-hydroxyalk(en/yn)ylimidazoles has been evaluated as serine-histidine bare dyad models for the ring-opening reaction of L-lacOCA, a cyclic O-carboxyanhydride. These models were selected to unravel the implication of intramolecular hydrogen bonding and to substantiate its influence on the nucleophilicity of the alcohol moiety, as it is suspected to occur in enzyme active sites. Although designed to exclusively facilitate the preliminary step of proton transfer during the studied ring-opening reaction, these minimalistic models depicted a measureable increase in reactivity relative to the isolated fragments. A couple of reliable experimental and theoretical methods have been developed to readily monitor the strength of the intramolecular hydrogen bond in dilute solution. Results show that the folded conformers are the most nucleophilic species because of the intramolecular hydrogen bond.


Chemical Reviews | 1970

Dynamic combinatorial chemistry

Peter T. Corbett; Julien Leclaire; Laurent Vial; Kevin R. West; Jean-Luc Wietor; Jeremy K. M. Sanders; Sijbren Otto

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Gérard Buono

Aix-Marseille University

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Jorge A. Rodriguez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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