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Dive into the research topics where Marylène Bertrand is active.

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Featured researches published by Marylène Bertrand.


Astrobiology | 2015

Biosignatures on Mars: What, Where, and How? Implications for the Search for Martian Life.

Frances Westall; Frédéric Foucher; Nicolas Bost; Marylène Bertrand; Damien Loizeau; Jorge L. Vago; Gerhard Kminek; Frédéric Gaboyer; Kathleen A. Campbell; Jean-Gabriel Bréhéret; Pascale Gautret; Charles S. Cockell

Abstract The search for traces of life is one of the principal objectives of Mars exploration. Central to this objective is the concept of habitability, the set of conditions that allows the appearance of life and successful establishment of microorganisms in any one location. While environmental conditions may have been conducive to the appearance of life early in martian history, habitable conditions were always heterogeneous on a spatial scale and in a geological time frame. This “punctuated” scenario of habitability would have had important consequences for the evolution of martian life, as well as for the presence and preservation of traces of life at a specific landing site. We hypothesize that, given the lack of long-term, continuous habitability, if martian life developed, it was (and may still be) chemotrophic and anaerobic. Obtaining nutrition from the same kinds of sources as early terrestrial chemotrophic life and living in the same kinds of environments, the fossilized traces of the latter serve as useful proxies for understanding the potential distribution of martian chemotrophs and their fossilized traces. Thus, comparison with analog, anaerobic, volcanic terrestrial environments (Early Archean >3.5–3.33 Ga) shows that the fossil remains of chemotrophs in such environments were common, although sparsely distributed, except in the vicinity of hydrothermal activity where nutrients were readily available. Moreover, the traces of these kinds of microorganisms can be well preserved, provided that they are rapidly mineralized and that the sediments in which they occur are rapidly cemented. We evaluate the biogenicity of these signatures by comparing them to possible abiotic features. Finally, we discuss the implications of different scenarios for life on Mars for detection by in situ exploration, ranging from its non-appearance, through preserved traces of life, to the presence of living microorganisms. Key Words: Mars—Early Earth—Anaerobic chemotrophs—Biosignatures—Astrobiology missions to Mars. Astrobiology 15, 998–1029.


Astrobiology | 2012

The PROCESS experiment: exposure of amino acids in the EXPOSE-E experiment on the international space station and in laboratory simulations.

Marylène Bertrand; Annie Chabin; Andre Brack; H. Cottin; Didier Chaput; Frances Westall

To understand the chemical behavior of organic molecules in the space environment, amino acids and a dipeptide in pure form and embedded in meteorite powder were exposed in the PROCESS experiment in the EXPOSE-E facility mounted on the European Technology Exposure Facility (EuTEF) platform on board the International Space Station (ISS). After exposure to space conditions for 18 months, the samples were returned to Earth and analyzed in the laboratory for reactions caused by solar UV and cosmic radiation. Chemical degradation and possible racemization and oligomerization, the main reactions caused by photochemistry in the vacuum ultraviolet domain (VUV, wavelength range 100-200 nm for photon energy from 6.2 to 12.4 eV) were examined in particular. The molecules were extracted and derivatized by silylation and analyzed by gas chromatograph coupled to a mass spectrometer (GC-MS) to quantify the rate of the degradation of the compounds. Laboratory exposure in several wavelength ranges from UV to VUV was carried out in parallel in the Cologne Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR) Center and Centre de biophysique moléculaire (CBM) laboratories. The results show that resistance to irradiation is a function of the chemical nature of the exposed molecules and the wavelengths of the UV light. The most altered compounds were the dipeptide, aspartic acid, and aminobutyric acid. The most resistant were alanine, valine, glycine, and aminoisobutyric acid. Our results also demonstrate the protective effect of meteorite powder, which reemphasizes the importance of exogenic contribution to the inventory of prebiotic organics on early Earth.


Astrobiology | 2012

The PROCESS experiment: an astrochemistry laboratory for solid and gaseous organic samples in low-earth orbit.

H. Cottin; Yuan Yong Guan; Audrey Noblet; Olivier Poch; Kafila Saiagh; Mégane Cloix; Frédérique Macari; Murielle Jerome; Patrice Coll; F. Raulin; Fabien Stalport; Cyril Szopa; Marylène Bertrand; Annie Chabin; Frances Westall; Didier Chaput; René Demets

The PROCESS (PRebiotic Organic ChEmistry on the Space Station) experiment was part of the EXPOSE-E payload outside the European Columbus module of the International Space Station from February 2008 to August 2009. During this interval, organic samples were exposed to space conditions to simulate their evolution in various astrophysical environments. The samples used represent organic species related to the evolution of organic matter on the small bodies of the Solar System (carbonaceous asteroids and comets), the photolysis of methane in the atmosphere of Titan, and the search for organic matter at the surface of Mars. This paper describes the hardware developed for this experiment as well as the results for the glycine solid-phase samples and the gas-phase samples that were used with regard to the atmosphere of Titan. Lessons learned from this experiment are also presented for future low-Earth orbit astrochemistry investigations.


Astrobiology | 2009

The Fate of Amino Acids During Simulated Meteoritic Impact

Marylène Bertrand; Sjerry van der Gaast; Faith Vilas; Friedrich Hörz; Gerald Haynes; Annie Chabin; Frances Westall

Delivery of prebiotic molecules, such as amino acids and peptides, in meteoritic/micrometeoritic materials to early Earth during the first 500 million years is considered to be one of the main processes by which the building blocks of life arrived on Earth. In this context, we present a study in which the effects of impact shock on amino acids and a peptide in artificial meteorites composed of saponite clay were investigated. The samples were subjected to pressures ranging from 12-28.9 GPa, which simulated impact velocities of 2.4-5.8 km/s for typical silicate-silicate impacts on Earth. Volatilization was determined by weight loss measurement, and the amino acid and peptide response was analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. For all compounds, degradation increased with peak pressure. At the highest shock pressures, amino acids with an alkyl side chain were more resistant than those with functional side chains. The peptide cleaved into its two primary amino acids. Some chiral amino acids experienced partial racemization during the course of the experiment. Our data indicate that impact shock may act as a selective filter to the delivery of extraterrestrial amino acids via carbonaceous chondrites.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2000

Conformational Transition of Acidic Peptides Exposed to Minerals in Suspension

Marylène Bertrand

Mineral surfaces probably participated in the chemical processes which led to life in the primitive oceans. The ordered conformations of simple acidic peptides exposed to insoluble minerals are described. Alternating poly(Glu-Leu) adopts a random coil conformation in water due to charge repulsion. The polypeptide extracts cations from insoluble crystalline CdS or molybdenum and adopts an ordered conformation. CdS leads to the formation of beta-sheets whereas molybdenum leads to alpha-helices. Peptides with at least 10-amino acids are necessary to exhibit a significative adsorption onto the surface. Under the same conditions, montmorillonite adsorbs the polypeptide but does not induce any conformational change.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015

The AMINO experiment: exposure of amino acids in the EXPOSE-R experiment on the International Space Station and in laboratory

Marylène Bertrand; Annie Chabin; Cyril Colas; Martine Cadene; Didier Chaput; H. Cottin; Frances Westall

In order to confirm the results of previous experiments concerning the chemical behaviour of organic molecules in the space environment, organic molecules (amino acids and a dipeptide) in pure form and embedded in meteorite powder were exposed in the AMINO experiment in the EXPOSE-R facility onboard the International Space Station. After exposure to space conditions for 24 months (2843 h of irradiation), the samples were returned to the Earth and analysed in the laboratory for reactions caused by solar ultraviolet (UV) and other electromagnetic radiation. Laboratory UV exposure was carried out in parallel in the Cologne DLR Center (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft und Raumfahrt). The molecules were extracted from the sample holder and then (1) derivatized by silylation and analysed by gas chromatography coupled to a mass spectrometer (GC–MS) in order to quantify the rate of degradation of the compounds and (2) analysed by high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) in order to understand the chemical reactions that occurred. The GC–MS results confirm that resistance to irradiation is a function of the chemical nature of the exposed molecules and of the wavelengths of the UV light. They also confirm the protective effect of a coating of meteorite powder. The most altered compounds were the dipeptides and aspartic acid while the most robust were compounds with a hydrocarbon chain. The MS analyses document the products of reactions, such as decarboxylation and decarbonylation of aspartic acid, taking place after UV exposure. Given the universality of chemistry in space, our results have a broader implication for the fate of organic molecules that seeded the planets as soon as they became habitable as well as for the effects of UV radiation on exposed molecules at the surface of Mars, for example.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015

The AMINO experiment: a laboratory for astrochemistry and astrobiology on the EXPOSE-R facility of the International Space Station

H. Cottin; Kafila Saiagh; Yuanyuan Guan; Mégane Cloix; Diana Khalaf; Frédérique Macari; Murielle Jerome; J.-M. Polienor; Yves Benilan; Patrice Coll; Nicolas Fray; Marie-Claire Gazeau; F. Raulin; Fabien Stalport; Nathalie Carrasco; Cyril Szopa; Marylène Bertrand; Annie Chabin; Frances Westall; Jacques Vergne; L.A. Da Silva; Marie-Christine Maurel; Didier Chaput; René Demets

The study of the evolution of organic matter subjected to space conditions, and more specifically to Solar photons in the vacuum ultraviolet range (120–200 nm) has been undertaken in low-Earth orbit since the 1990s, and implemented on various space platforms. This paper describes a photochemistry experiment called AMINO, conducted during 22 months between 2009 and 2011 on the EXPOSE-R ESA facility, outside the International Space Station. Samples with relevance to astrobiology (connected to comets, carbonaceous meteorites and micrometeorites, the atmosphere of Titan and RNA world hypothesis) have been selected and exposed to space environment. They have been analysed after return to the Earth. This paper is not discussing the results of the experiment, but rather gives a general overview of the project, the details of the hardware used, its configuration and recent developments to enable long-duration exposure of gaseous samples in tight closed cells enabling for the first time to derive quantitative results from gaseous phase samples exposed in space.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 1997

Conformational variety of polyanionic peptides at low salt concentrations.

Marylène Bertrand

Cordially dedicated to Dr. Leslie Orgel on the occasion of his 70th birthday.Sequential oligo- and polypeptides based on glutamic acid and leucine residues have been synthesized. In pure water, they exhibit a random coil conformation. Addition of very small amounts of divalent metallic cations induces the formation of ordered structure in the peptides which remain in solution. Higher salt concentrations precipitate the peptides. Polypeptides with alternating glutamic acid and leucine residues undergo a coil to β -sheet transition in the presence of Ca2+, Ba2+, Mn2+, Co2+, Zn2+ and Hg2+. Addition of Cu2+ or Fe2+ induces the formation of anα -helix. Solid amorphous CdS generates water soluble β -sheets, as well. Sequential poly(Leu-Glu-Glu-Leu) adopts an α -helix in the presence of divalent cations. The sequence-dependent conformational diversity was extended to poly(Asp-Leu) and poly(Leu-Asp-Asp-Leu).


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015

Window contamination on Expose-R

René Demets; Marylène Bertrand; A. Bolkhovitinov; Kathryn L. Bryson; C. Colas; H. Cottin; Jan Dettmann; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Andreas Elsaesser; E. Jaramillo; M. Lebert; G. van Papendrecht; C. Pereira; T. Rohr; Kafila Saiagh; M. Schuster

Expose is a multi-user instrument for astrobiological and astrochemical experiments in space. InstalledattheoutersurfaceoftheInternationalSpaceStation, itenablesinvestigatorstostudytheimpactof the open space environment on biological and biochemical test samples. Two Expose missions have been completedso far,designatedasExpose-E (Rabbowet al.2012) andExpose-R(Rabbowet al.this issue).One of the space-unique environmental factors offered by Expose is full-spectrum, ultraviolet (UV)-rich electromagnetic radiation from the Sun. This paper describes and analyses how on Expose-R, access of the test samples to Solar radiation degraded during space exposure in an unpredicted way. Several windows in front of the Sun-exposed test samples acquired a brown shade, resulting in a reduced transparency in visible light, UV and vacuum UV (VUV). Post-flight investigations revealed the discolouration to be caused by a homogenous film of cross-linked organic polymers at the inside of the windows. The chemical signature varied per sample carrier. No such films were found on windows from sealed, pressurized compartments, or on windows that had been kept out of the Sun. This suggests that volatile compounds originating from the interior of the Expose facility were cross-linked and photo-fixed by Solar irradiation at the rear side of the windows. The origin of the volatiles was not fully identified; most probably there was a variety of sources involved including the biological test samples, adhesives, plastics and printed circuit boards. The outer surface of the windows (pointing into space) was chemically impacted as well, with a probable effect on the transparency in VUV. The reported analysis of the window contamination on Expose-R is expected to help theinterpretationofthescientificresultsandofferspossibilitiestomitigatethisproblemonfuturemissions - in particular Expose-R2, the direct successor of Expose-R.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1993

A new route to sequential polypeptides combining solid phase synthesis and solution peptide synthesis

Josette Verhaeghe; Eric Lacassie; Marylène Bertrand; Yves Trudelle

Abstract The cleavage of a resin-bound peptide from an oxime resin using the 2-phenacyloxyphenyl ester of an aminoacid provides a peptide with this aminoacid in C-terminal position. The inactive 2-phenacyloxyphenyl peptide ester thus obtained can then be converted into 2-hydroxyphenyl acts active ester. The polymerization of the repeat unit using this mode of activation gives sequential polypeptides of reasonable molecular weight and of high optical purity.

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Dive into the Marylène Bertrand's collaboration.

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Frances Westall

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Annie Chabin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Didier Chaput

Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales

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F. Raulin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Cyril Szopa

Institut Universitaire de France

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Frédérique Macari

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabien Stalport

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Bernard Barbier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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David Coscia

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Yuan Yong Guan

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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