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Dive into the research topics where Laurence Braun is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurence Braun.


Genes & Development | 2010

Argonaute quenching and global changes in Dicer homeostasis caused by a pathogen-encoded GW repeat protein

Jacinthe Azevedo; Damien Garcia; Dominique Pontier; Stephanie Ohnesorge; Agnès Yu; Shahinez Garcia; Laurence Braun; Marc Bergdoll; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi; Thierry Lagrange; Olivier Voinnet

In plants and invertebrates, viral-derived siRNAs processed by the RNaseIII Dicer guide Argonaute (AGO) proteins as part of antiviral RNA-induced silencing complexes (RISC). As a counterdefense, viruses produce suppressor proteins (VSRs) that inhibit the host silencing machinery, but their mechanisms of action and cellular targets remain largely unknown. Here, we show that the Turnip crinckle virus (TCV) capsid, the P38 protein, acts as a homodimer, or multiples thereof, to mimic host-encoded glycine/tryptophane (GW)-containing proteins normally required for RISC assembly/function in diverse organisms. The P38 GW residues bind directly and specifically to Arabidopsis AGO1, which, in addition to its role in endogenous microRNA-mediated silencing, is identified as a major effector of TCV-derived siRNAs. Point mutations in the P38 GW residues are sufficient to abolish TCV virulence, which is restored in Arabidopsis ago1 hypomorphic mutants, uncovering both physical and genetic interactions between the two proteins. We further show how AGO1 quenching by P38 profoundly impacts the cellular availability of the four Arabidopsis Dicers, uncovering an AGO1-dependent, homeostatic network that functionally connects these factors together. The likely widespread occurrence and expected consequences of GW protein mimicry on host silencing pathways are discussed in the context of innate and adaptive immunity in plants and metazoans.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

A Complex Small RNA Repertoire Is Generated by a Plant/Fungal-Like Machinery and Effected by a Metazoan-Like Argonaute in the Single-Cell Human Parasite Toxoplasma gondii

Laurence Braun; Dominique Cannella; Philippe Ortet; Mohamed Barakat; Céline F. Sautel; Sylvie Kieffer; Jérôme Garin; Olivier Bastien; Olivier Voinnet; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

In RNA silencing, small RNAs produced by the RNase-III Dicer guide Argonaute-like proteins as part of RNA-induced silencing complexes (RISC) to regulate gene expression transcriptionally or post-transcriptionally. Here, we have characterized the RNA silencing machinery and exhaustive small RNAome of Toxoplasma gondii, member of the Apicomplexa, a phylum of animal- and human-infecting parasites that cause extensive health and economic damages to human populations worldwide. Remarkably, the small RNA-generating machinery of Toxoplasma is phylogenetically and functionally related to that of plants and fungi, and accounts for an exceptionally diverse array of small RNAs. This array includes conspicuous populations of repeat-associated small interfering RNA (siRNA), which, as in plants, likely generate and maintain heterochromatin at DNA repeats and satellites. Toxoplasma small RNAs also include many microRNAs with clear metazoan-like features whose accumulation is sometimes extremely high and dynamic, an unexpected finding given that Toxoplasma is a unicellular protist. Both plant-like heterochromatic small RNAs and metazoan-like microRNAs bind to a single Argonaute protein, Tg-AGO. Toxoplasma miRNAs co-sediment with polyribosomes, and thus, are likely to act as translational regulators, consistent with the lack of catalytic residues in Tg-AGO. Mass spectrometric analyses of the Tg-AGO protein complex revealed a common set of virtually all known RISC components so far characterized in human and Drosophila, as well as novel proteins involved in RNA metabolism. In agreement with its loading with heterochromatic small RNAs, Tg-AGO also associates substoichiometrically with components of known chromatin-repressing complexes. Thus, a puzzling patchwork of silencing processor and effector proteins from plant, fungal and metazoan origin accounts for the production and action of an unsuspected variety of small RNAs in the single-cell parasite Toxoplasma and possibly in other apicomplexans. This study establishes Toxoplasma as a unique model system for studying the evolution and molecular mechanisms of RNA silencing among eukaryotes.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

A Toxoplasma dense granule protein, GRA24, modulates the early immune response to infection by promoting a direct and sustained host p38 MAPK activation

Laurence Braun; Marie-Pierre Brenier-Pinchart; Manickam Yogavel; Aurélie Curt-Varesano; Rose-Laurence Curt-Bertini; Tahir Hussain; Sylvie Kieffer-Jaquinod; Yohann Couté; Hervé Pelloux; Isabelle Tardieux; Amit Sharma; Hassan Belrhali; Alexandre Bougdour; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

Toxoplasma gondii secretes a novel dense granule protein, GRA24, that traffics from the vacuole to the host cell nucleus where it prolongs p38a activation and correlates with proinflammatory cytokine production.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2009

The small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO)-conjugating system of Toxoplasma gondii

Laurence Braun; Dominique Cannella; Alexandre M. Pinheiro; Sylvie Kieffer; Hassan Belrhali; Jérôme Garin; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

SUMOylation, the reversible covalent attachment of small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) peptides has emerged as an important regulator of target protein function. Here we show, by characterization of the Toxoplasma gondii SUMO pathway, that the SUMO conjugation system operates in apicomplexan parasites. A gene encoding the SUMO tag was discovered as were genes encoding the various enzymes required for SUMO processing, ligation and release. Various SUMO conjugates were immuno-detected and by means of a global proteomic-based approach, we identified several T. gondii SUMOylated proteins that reveal many diverse cellular processes in which the modification plays a role. More specifically, SUMO conjugates were seen at the tachyzoite surface in response to signaling generated by host cell contact at the time of invasion. Also, under tissue culture conditions that stimulate bradyzoite differentiation (alkaline pH), we observed the conjugates at the parasitophorous vacuole membrane. The labeling was also at the surface of the mature cysts isolated from parasite-infected mouse brain. Overall, the SUMO conjugation system appears to be a complex and functionally heterogeneous pathway for protein modification in T. gondii with initial data indicating that it is likely to play a putative role in host cell invasion and cyst genesis.


Cellular Microbiology | 2010

Chromatin modifications: implications in the regulation of gene expression in Toxoplasma gondii.

Alexandre Bougdour; Laurence Braun; Dominique Cannella; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

The apicomplexan Toxoplasma gondii completes its life cycle by successive processes of parasite differentiation that rely on a tight control of gene expression to ensure appropriate protein profiles on time. During the last 5 years, several groups have pioneered this field of investigation, suggesting that epigenetics could play an important role in the control of parasite gene expression. Histone modifications serve as an effective way to regulate gene transcription but they do not operate alone; rather, they act in concert with other putative epigenetic information carriers (histone variants, small RNAs) and DNA sequence‐specific transcription factors to modulate the higher‐order structure of the chromatin fibre and govern the on‐time recruitment of the transcriptional machinery to specific genes. Regarding the ‘histone code’ hypothesis, the parasite is endowed with a rich repertoire of histone‐modifying enzymes catalysing site‐selective modifications, which are subsequently interpreted by effector proteins that recognize specific covalent marks. Still, several peculiarities seem unique to T. gondii. This review is a synthesis of the current knowledge of how epigenetics contribute to the control of gene expression in T. gondii and, likely, other Apicomplexa.


Cell Reports | 2014

miR-146a and miR-155 delineate a MicroRNA fingerprint associated with Toxoplasma persistence in the host brain.

Dominique Cannella; Marie-Pierre Brenier-Pinchart; Laurence Braun; Jason M. van Rooyen; Alexandre Bougdour; Olivier Bastien; Michael S. Behnke; Rose-Laurence Curt; Aurélie Curt; Jeroen Saeij; L. David Sibley; Hervé Pelloux; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

microRNAs were recently found to be regulators of the host response to infection by apicomplexan parasites. In this study, we identified two immunomodulatory microRNAs, miR-146a and miR-155, that were coinduced in the brains of mice challenged with Toxoplasma in a strain-specific manner. These microRNAs define a characteristic fingerprint for infection by type II strains, which are the most prevalent cause of human toxoplasmosis in Europe and North America. Using forward genetics, we showed that strain-specific differences in miR-146a modulation were in part mediated by the rhoptry kinase, ROP16. Remarkably, we found that miR-146a deficiency led to better control of parasite burden in the gut and most likely of early parasite dissemination in the brain tissue, resulting in the long-term survival of mice.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Toxoplasma gondii TgIST co-opts host chromatin repressors dampening STAT1-dependent gene regulation and IFN-γ–mediated host defenses

Laurence Braun; Marie-Pierre Brenier-Pinchart; Julien Vollaire; Véronique Josserand; Rose-Laurence Bertini; Aurélie Varesano; Bastien Touquet; Pieter-Jan De Bock; Yohann Couté; Isabelle Tardieux; Alexandre Bougdour; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

Gay et al. identify a Toxoplasma gondii secreted effector that recruits NuRD transcriptional repressor and blocks IFN-γ–stimulated STAT1-dependent gene expression, thus dampening host responses to infection.


Cellular Microbiology | 2016

The aspartyl protease TgASP5 mediates the export of the Toxoplasma GRA16 and GRA24 effectors into host cells

Aurélie Curt-Varesano; Laurence Braun; Caroline Ranquet; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi; Alexandre Bougdour

Toxoplasma gondii and Plasmodium species are obligatory intracellular parasites that export proteins into the infected cells in order to interfere with host‐signalling pathways, acquire nutrients or evade host defense mechanisms. With regard to export mechanism, a wealth of information in Plasmodium spp. is available, while the mechanisms operating in T. gondii remain uncertain. The recent discovery of exported proteins in T. gondii, mainly represented by dense granule resident proteins, might explain this discrepancy and offers a unique opportunity to study the export mechanism in T. gondii. Here, we report that GRA16 export is mediated by two protein elements present in its N‐terminal region. Because the first element contains a putative Plasmodium export element linear motif (RRLAE), we hypothesized that GRA16 export depended on a maturation process involving protein cleavage. Using both N‐ and C‐terminal epitope tags, we provide evidence for protein proteolysis occurring in the N‐terminus of GRA16. We show that TgASP5, the T. gondii homolog of Plasmodium plasmepsin V, is essential for GRA16 export and is directly responsible for its maturation in a Plasmodium export element‐dependent manner. Interestingly, TgASP5 is also involved in GRA24 export, although the GRA24 maturation mechanism is TgASP5‐independent. Our data reveal different modus operandi for protein export, in which TgASP5 should play multiple functions.


Traffic | 2008

Toxoplasma gondii Uses Unusual Sorting Mechanisms to Deliver Transmembrane Proteins into the Host‐Cell Vacuole

Claire Gendrin; Corinne Mercier; Laurence Braun; Karine Musset; Jean-Francxois Dubremetz; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw

A critical step in infection by the apicomplexan parasite Toxoplasma gondii is the formation of a membrane‐bound compartment within which the parasite proliferates. This process relies on a set of secretory organelles that discharge their contents into the host cell upon invasion. Among these organelles, the dense granules are specialized in the export of transmembrane (TM) GRA proteins, which are major components of the mature parasitophorous vacuole (PV) membrane. How eukaryotic pathogens export and sort membrane‐bound proteins destined for the host cell is still poorly understood at the mechanistic level. In this study, we show that soluble trafficking of the PV‐targeted GRA5 TM protein is parasite specific: when expressed in mammalian cells, GRA5 is targeted to the plasma membrane and behaves as an integral membrane protein with a type I toplogy. We also demonstrate the dual role of the GRA5 N‐terminal ectodomain, which is sufficient to prevent membrane integration within the parasite and is essential for both sorting and post‐secretory membrane insertion into the vacuolar membrane. These results contrast with the general rule that states that information contained within the cytoplasmic tail and/or the TM domain of integral membrane proteins dictates their cellular localization. They also highlight the diversity of sorting mechanisms that leads to the specialization of secretory processes uniquely adapted to intracellular parasitism.


Structure | 2017

Structural Basis for the Subversion of MAP Kinase Signaling by an Intrinsically Disordered Parasite Secreted Agonist.

Erika Pellegrini; Andrés Palencia; Laurence Braun; Ulrike Kapp; Alexandre Bougdour; Hassan Belrhali; Matthew W. Bowler; Mohamed-Ali Hakimi

Summary The causative agent of toxoplasmosis, the intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii, delivers a protein, GRA24, into the cells it infects that interacts with the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase p38α (MAPK14), leading to activation and nuclear translocation of the host kinase and a subsequent inflammatory response that controls the progress of the parasite. The purification of a recombinant complex of GRA24 and human p38α has allowed the molecular basis of this activation to be determined. GRA24 is shown to be intrinsically disordered, binding two kinases that act independently, and is the only factor required to bypass the canonical mitogen-activated protein kinase activation pathway. An adapted kinase interaction motif (KIM) forms a highly stable complex that competes with cytoplasmic regulatory partners. In addition, the recombinant complex forms a powerful in vitro tool to evaluate the specificity and effectiveness of p38α inhibitors that have advanced to clinical trials, as it provides a hitherto unavailable stable and highly active form of p38α.

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Thierry Lagrange

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hassan Belrhali

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Aurélie Curt-Varesano

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bastien Touquet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Claire Picart

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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