Marie-Claude Gagnon
Laval University
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Featured researches published by Marie-Claude Gagnon.
Molecular Endocrinology | 2009
Maxime Sasseville; Marie-Claude Gagnon; Christine Guillemette; Robert Sullivan; Robert B. Gilchrist; F. J. Richard
Gap-junctional communication (GJC) plays a central role in oocyte growth. However, little is known about the regulation of connexin 43 (Cx43)-based gap-junction channels in cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) during in vitro maturation. We show that rupture of COCs from mural granulosa cells up-regulates Cx43-mediated GJC and that gonadotropins signal GJC breakdown by recruiting Cx43 to lipid rafts when oocyte meiosis resumes. Oocyte calcein uptake through gap junctions increases during early in vitro oocyte maturation and remains high until 18 h, when it falls simultaneously with the oocyte germinal vesicle breakdown. Immunodetection of Cx43 and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching assays revealed that the increase of GJC is independent of gonadotropins but requires RNA transcription, RNA polyadenylation, and translation. GJC rupture, in contrast, is achieved by a gonadotropin-dependent mechanism involving recruitment of Cx43 to clustered lipid rafts. These results show that GJC up-regulation in COCs in in vitro culture is independent of gonadotropins and transcriptionally regulated. However, GJC breakdown is gonadotropin dependent and mediated by the clustering of Cx43 in lipid raft microdomains. In conclusion, this study supports a functional role of lipid raft clustering of Cx43 in GJC breakdown in the COCs during in vitro maturation.
Biochemistry | 2017
Marie-Claude Gagnon; Erik Strandberg; Ariadna Grau-Campistany; Parvesh Wadhwani; Johannes Reichert; Jochen Bürck; Francesc Rabanal; Michèle Auger; Jean-François Paquin; Anne S. Ulrich
Hydrophobic mismatch is important for pore-forming amphipathic antimicrobial peptides, as demonstrated recently [Grau-Campistany, A., et al. (2015) Sci. Rep. 5, 9388]. A series of different length peptides have been generated with the heptameric repeat sequence KIAGKIA, called KIA peptides, and it was found that only those helices sufficiently long to span the hydrophobic thickness of the membrane could induce leakage in lipid vesicles; there was also a clear length dependence of the antimicrobial and hemolytic activities. For the original KIA sequences, the cationic charge increased with peptide length. The goal of this work is to examine whether the charge also has an effect on activity; hence, we constructed two further series of peptides with a sequence similar to those of the KIA peptides, but with a constant charge of +7 for all lengths from 14 to 28 amino acids. For both of these new series, a clear length dependence similar to that of KIA peptides was observed, indicating that charge has only a minor influence. Both series also showed a distinct threshold length for peptides to be active, which correlates directly with the thickness of the membrane. Among the longer peptides, the new series showed activities only slightly lower than those of the original KIA peptides of the same length that had a higher charge. Shorter peptides, in which Gly was replaced with Lys, showed activities similar to those of KIA peptides of the same length, but peptides in which Ile was replaced with Lys lost their helicity and were less active.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018
Marie-Claude Gagnon; Erik Strandberg; Anne S. Ulrich; Jean-François Paquin; Michèle Auger
Abstract Solid-state 19F NMR spectroscopy is a method of choice to study the interactions between lipid membranes and other molecules such as peptides, proteins or drugs. Numerous fluorine-labeled NMR probes have been developed over the last few years, especially fluorine-labeled peptides. In order to develop a new kind of NMR reporter molecule and a complementary approach to fluorine-labeling of peptides, we synthesized six monofluorinated derivatives of the lipid dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (F-DMPC), with the fluorine atom located along the acyl chain linked to the central glycerol position. To better understand the behavior of these fluorine-labeled lipids, we report here the investigation of F-DMPC membrane properties using solid-state 2H, 15N, 19F‐ and 31P‐NMR spectroscopy. This study was carried out on pure F-DMPC bilayers as well as F-DMPC/DMPC mixtures at various ratios. Slight perturbations were observed for pure F-DMPC multilamellar vesicles (MLVs), most noticeable for lipids with the fluorine atom located at the extremities of the acyl chain. On the other hand, no significant perturbations were observed for F-DMPC/DMPC MLVs containing up to 25% F-DMPC, nor for any fluorine-labeled bilayers that were prepared as macroscopically oriented samples. To test the interaction with some representative peptides, 15N-labeled α-helical antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) were incorporated into F-DMPC/DMPC (1/3) bilayers. 15N SS-NMR analyses confirmed that the known orientation of each AMP in pure DMPC was preserved in the presence of 25% monofluorinated DMPC, irrespective of the position of the 19F-label. In summary, F-DMPC/DMPC (1/3) model membranes can be used as NMR reporter to study membrane interactions with other molecules.
European Biophysics Journal | 2018
Kim Potvin-Fournier; Geneviève Valois-Paillard; Marie-Claude Gagnon; Thierry Lefèvre; Pierre Audet; Line Cantin; Jean-François Paquin; Christian Salesse; Michèle Auger
Recoverin is a protein involved in the phototransduction cascade by regulating the activity of rhodopsin kinase through a calcium-dependent binding process at the surface of rod outer segment disk membranes. We have investigated the interaction of recoverin with zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine bilayers, the major lipid component of the rod outer segment disk membranes, using both 31P and 19F solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and infrared spectroscopy. In particular, several novel approaches have been used, such as the centerband-only detection of exchange (CODEX) technique to investigate lipid lateral diffusion and 19F NMR to probe the environment of the recoverin myristoyl group. The results reveal that the lipid bilayer organization is not disturbed by recoverin. Non-myristoylated recoverin induces a small increase in lipid hydration that appears to be correlated with an increased lipid lateral diffusion. The thermal stability of recoverin remains similar in the absence or presence of lipids and Ca2+. Fluorine atoms have been strategically introduced at positions 4 or 12 on the myristoyl moiety of recoverin to, respectively, probe its behavior in the interfacial and more hydrophobic regions of the membrane. 19F NMR results allow the observation of the calcium–myristoyl switch, the myristoyl group experiencing two different environments in the absence of Ca2+ and the immobilization of the recoverin myristoyl moiety in phosphatidylcholine membranes in the presence of Ca2+.
Endocrinology | 2008
Maxime Sasseville; Nancy Côté; Marie-Claude Gagnon; François J. Richard
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2012
Jonathan Guimond-Tremblay; Marie-Claude Gagnon; Jozy-Ann Pineault-Maltais; Vanessa Turcotte; Michèle Auger; Jean-François Paquin
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2014
Marie-Claude Gagnon; Bianka Turgeon; Jean-Daniel Savoie; Jean-François Parent; Michèle Auger; Jean-François Paquin
Journal of Fluorine Chemistry | 2018
Marie-Claude Gagnon; Paméla Ouellet; Michèle Auger; Jean-François Paquin
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2018
Marie-Claude Gagnon; Michèle Auger; Jean-François Paquin
European Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2017
Marie-Claude Gagnon; Sébastien Dautrey; Xavier Bertrand; Michèle Auger; Jean-François Paquin