Laurence Marquès
University of Montpellier
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Featured researches published by Laurence Marquès.
Phytochemistry | 1994
Laurence Marquès; Annie Fleuriet; Jean-Claude Cleyet-Marel; Jean-Jacques Macheix
Abstract An active proteolysed isoform of apple pulp polyphenoloxidase (PPO) was purified by a very quick three-step method based on its resistance to further sodium dodecyl sulphate-proteinase K digestion. After extraction from a thylakoid membrane pellet and pre-purification by temperature-induced phase partitioning, PPO was subjected to sodium dodecyl sulphate-proteinase K digestion, and then 388-fold to homogeneity purified by DEAE-cellulose column chromatography with a yield greater than 40%. This purified, enzymatically active PPO isoform was used to raise polyclonal antibodies. High titred specific serum was obtained and immunoblots were performed to detect active and latent forms of the enzyme.
New Phytologist | 2011
Ronald J. F. J. Oomen; Emilie Séveno-Carpentier; Nicolas Ricodeau; Caroline Bournaud; Geneviève Conéjéro; Nadine Paris; Pierre Berthomieu; Laurence Marquès
• Apart from their antifungal role, plant defensins have recently been shown to be involved in abiotic stress tolerance or in inhibition of root growth when added in plant culture medium. We studied the subcellular localization of these proteins, which may account for these different roles. • Stable and transient expression of AhPDF1.1::GFP (green fluorescent protein) fusion proteins were analysed in yeast and plants. Functional tests established that the GFP tag did not alter the action of the defensin. Subcellular localization of AhPDF1.1 was characterized: by imaging AhPDF1.1::GFP together with organelle markers; and by immunolabelling AhPDF1.1 in Arabidopsis halleri and Arabidopsis thaliana leaves using a polyclonal serum. • All our independent approaches demonstrated that AhPDF1.1 is retained in intracellular compartments on the way to the lytic vacuole, instead of being addressed to the apoplasm. • These findings challenge the commonly accepted idea of secretion of defensins. The subcellular localization highlighted in this study could partly explain the dual role of plant defensins on plant cells and is of major importance to unravel the mechanisms of action of these proteins at the cellular level.
Phytochemistry | 1998
Stéphane Mari; Laurence Marquès; Frédéric Breton; Yannis Karamanos; Jean-Jacques Macheix
For the first time, unfolding (6 M guanidine) and refolding of partially proteolysed purified polyphenol oxidase (PPOr) was achieved, with 88% of activity recovered. Optimal refolding conditions consisted in stepwise dialysis of guanidine treated extracts, the dialysis buffers containing 1 M (NH4)2SO4 and 100 microM CuSO4. However, CuSO4 had limited effect on the recovering of PPOr activity, whereas (NH4)2SO4 was essential. Concerning the PPO tertiary structure, denaturing conditions (combinations of boiling and reducing agent) used on SDS-PAGE have shown (i) a compact tertiary structure and (ii) the presence of disulfide bonds in PPOr, accounting for the shift between 27 and 41 kDa, and 41 and 42 kDa, respectively. Resistance to proteolytic cleavage was used to study the conformational changes induced by the denaturing treatments. Folded PPOr was resistant to further proteolysis whereas unfolded PPO was totally digested, indicating the role of tertiary structure of PPOr in the resistance to proteases.
Biochemistry | 2014
Fanny Meindre; Dominique Lelièvre; Karine Loth; Oriane Mith; Vincent Aucagne; Pierre Berthomieu; Laurence Marquès; Agnès F. Delmas; Céline Landon; Françoise Paquet
Plant defensins (PDF) are cysteine-rich peptides that are major actors in the innate immunity in plants. Besides their antifungal activity, some PDF such as Arabidopsis halleri PDF1.1b confer zinc tolerance in plants. Here we present (i) an efficient protocol for the production of AhPDF1.1b by solid-phase peptide synthesis followed by controlled oxidative folding to obtain the highly pure native form of the defensin and (ii) the three-dimensional (3D) nuclear magnetic resonance structure of AhPDF1.1b, the first 3D structure of plant defensin obtained with a synthetic peptide. Its fold is organized around the typical cysteine-stabilized α-helix β-sheet motif and contains the γ-core motif involved in the antifungal activity of all plant defensins. On the basis of our structural analysis of AhPDF1 defensins combined with previous biological data for antifungal and zinc tolerance activities, we established the essential role of cis-Pro41 within the γ-core. In fact, the four consecutive residues (Val39-Phe40-Pro41-Ala42) are strictly conserved for plant defensins able to tolerate zinc. We hypothesized that structural and/or dynamic features of this sequence are related to the ability of the defensin to chelate zinc.
MicrobiologyOpen | 2015
Oriane Mith; Asma Benhamdi; Teddy Castillo; Muriel Bergé; Colin W. MacDiarmid; Janet Steffen; David J. Eide; Véronique Perrier; Maeva Subileau; Françoise Gosti; Pierre Berthomieu; Laurence Marquès
Antimicrobial peptides represent an expanding family of peptides involved in innate immunity of many living organisms. They show an amazing diversity in their sequence, structure, and mechanism of action. Among them, plant defensins are renowned for their antifungal activity but various side activities have also been described. Usually, a new biological role is reported along with the discovery of a new defensin and it is thus not clear if this multifunctionality exists at the family level or at the peptide level. We previously showed that the plant defensin AhPDF1.1b exhibits an unexpected role by conferring zinc tolerance to yeast and plant cells. In this paper, we further explored this activity using different yeast genetic backgrounds: especially the zrc1 mutant and an UPRE‐GFP reporter yeast strain. We showed that AhPDF1.1b interferes with adaptive cell response in the endoplasmic reticulum to confer cellular zinc tolerance. We thus highlighted that, depending on its cellular localization, AhPDF1.1b exerts quite separate activities: when it is applied exogenously, it is a toxin against fungal and also root cells, but when it is expressed in yeast cells, it is a peptide that modulates the cellular adaptive response to zinc overload.
Analytical Chemistry | 2003
Véronique Vacchina; Stéphane Mari; Pierre Czernic; Laurence Marquès; Katia Pianelli; Dirk Schaumlöffel; and Michel Lebrun; Ryszard Łobiński
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 1995
Marie-Pierre Fraignier; Laurence Marquès; Annie Fleuriet; Jean-Jacques Macheix
New Phytologist | 2004
Laurence Marquès; Magalie Cossegal; Stéphanie Bodin; Pierre Czernic; Michel Lebrun
New Phytologist | 2013
Zaigham Shahzad; Vincent Ranwez; Cécile Fizames; Laurence Marquès; Bénédicte Le Martret; Julien Alassimone; Cécile Godé; Eric Lacombe; Teddy Castillo; Pierre Saumitou-Laprade; Pierre Berthomieu; Françoise Gosti
Metallomics | 2011
Laurence Marquès; Ronald J. F. J. Oomen