Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mélanie Berbon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mélanie Berbon.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

NMR Spectroscopic Assignment of Backbone and Side-Chain Protons in Fully Protonated Proteins: Microcrystals, Sedimented Assemblies, and Amyloid Fibrils.

Jan Stanek; Loren B. Andreas; Kristaps Jaudzems; Diane Cala; D. Lalli; Andrea Bertarello; Tobias Schubeis; Inara Akopjana; Svetlana Kotelovica; Kaspars Tars; Andrea Pica; Serena Leone; Delia Picone; Zhi-Qiang Xu; Nicholas E. Dixon; Denis Martinez; Mélanie Berbon; Nadia El Mammeri; Abdelmajid Noubhani; Sven J. Saupe; Birgit Habenstein; Antoine Loquet; Guido Pintacuda

We demonstrate sensitive detection of alpha protons of fully protonated proteins by solid-state NMR spectroscopy with 100-111 kHz magic-angle spinning (MAS). The excellent resolution in the Cα-Hα plane is demonstrated for 5 proteins, including microcrystals, a sedimented complex, a capsid and amyloid fibrils. A set of 3D spectra based on a Cα-Hα detection block was developed and applied for the sequence-specific backbone and aliphatic side-chain resonance assignment using only 500 μg of sample. These developments accelerate structural studies of biomolecular assemblies available in submilligram quantities without the need of protein deuteration.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Identification of a novel cell death-inducing domain reveals that fungal amyloid-controlled programmed cell death is related to necroptosis

Asen Daskalov; Birgit Habenstein; Raimon Sabaté; Mélanie Berbon; Denis Martinez; Stéphane Chaignepain; Bénédicte Coulary-Salin; Kay Hofmann; Antoine Loquet; Sven J. Saupe

Significance Programmed cell death plays a central role in host defense in plants, animals, and fungi, but the extent to which cell death modalities are evolutionarily related and mechanistically similar in different kingdoms is unclear. The involvement of prion-like mechanisms in host defense and cell death cascades has been reported in animals and fungi. In fungi, a cell death-inducing pore-forming protein termed HET-S is activated by amyloid templating. Here we characterize a protein termed HELLP, which behaves analogously to HET-S as a membrane-targeting cell death-inducing protein regulated by amyloid templating. We find that HELLP is homologous to MLKL, the protein involved in execution of necroptotic cell death in mammals, thus revealing transkingdom conservation of amyloid-regulated programmed cell death. Recent findings have revealed the role of prion-like mechanisms in the control of host defense and programmed cell death cascades. In fungi, HET-S, a cell death-inducing protein containing a HeLo pore-forming domain, is activated through amyloid templating by a Nod-like receptor (NLR). Here we characterize the HELLP protein behaving analogously to HET-S and bearing a new type of N-terminal cell death-inducing domain termed HeLo-like (HELL) and a C-terminal regulatory amyloid motif known as PP. The gene encoding HELLP is part of a three-gene cluster also encoding a lipase (SBP) and a Nod-like receptor, both of which display the PP motif. The PP motif is similar to the RHIM amyloid motif directing formation of the RIP1/RIP3 necrosome in humans. The C-terminal region of HELLP, HELLP(215-278), encompassing the motif, allows prion propagation and assembles into amyloid fibrils, as demonstrated by X-ray diffraction and FTIR analyses. Solid-state NMR studies reveal a well-ordered local structure of the amyloid core residues and a primary sequence that is almost entirely arranged in a rigid conformation, and confirm a β-sheet structure in an assigned stretch of three amino acids. HELLP is activated by amyloid templating and displays membrane-targeting and cell death-inducing activity. HELLP targets the SBP lipase to the membrane, suggesting a synergy between HELLP and SBP in membrane dismantling. Remarkably, the HeLo-like domain of HELLP is homologous to the pore-forming domain of MLKL, the cell death-execution protein in necroptosis, revealing a transkingdom evolutionary relationship between amyloid-controlled fungal programmed cell death and mammalian necroptosis.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2018

Coiled-coil oligomerization controls localization of the plasma membrane REMORINs

Denis Martinez; Anthony Legrand; Julien Gronnier; Marion Decossas; Paul Gouguet; Olivier Lambert; Mélanie Berbon; Loris Verron; Axelle Grélard; Véronique Germain; Antoine Loquet; Sébastien Mongrand; Birgit Habenstein

REMORINs are nanodomain-organized proteins located in the plasma membrane and involved in cellular responses in plants. The dynamic assembly of the membrane nanodomains represents an essential tool of the versatile membrane barriers to control and modulate cellular functions. Nevertheless, the assembly mechanisms and protein organization strategies of nanodomains are poorly understood and many structural aspects are difficult to visualize. Using an ensemble of biophysical approaches, including solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance, cryo-electron microscopy and in vivo confocal imaging, we provide first insights on the role and the structural mechanisms of REMORIN trimerization. Our results suggest that the formation of REMORIN coiled-coil trimers is essential for membrane recruitment and promotes REMORIN assembly in vitro into long filaments by trimer-trimer interactions that might participate in nanoclustering into membrane domains in vivo.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2017

Atomic Scale Structural Studies of Macromolecular Assemblies by Solid-state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy

Antoine Loquet; James Tolchard; Mélanie Berbon; Denis Martinez; Birgit Habenstein

Supramolecular protein assemblies play fundamental roles in biological processes ranging from host-pathogen interaction, viral infection to the propagation of neurodegenerative disorders. Such assemblies consist in multiple protein subunits organized in a non-covalent way to form large macromolecular objects that can execute a variety of cellular functions or cause detrimental consequences. Atomic insights into the assembly mechanisms and the functioning of those macromolecular assemblies remain often scarce since their inherent insolubility and non-crystallinity often drastically reduces the quality of the data obtained from most techniques used in structural biology, such as X-ray crystallography and solution Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR). We here present magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR spectroscopy (SSNMR) as a powerful method to investigate structures of macromolecular assemblies at atomic resolution. SSNMR can reveal atomic details on the assembled complex without size and solubility limitations. The protocol presented here describes the essential steps from the production of 13C/15N isotope-labeled macromolecular protein assemblies to the acquisition of standard SSNMR spectra and their analysis and interpretation. As an example, we show the pipeline of a SSNMR structural analysis of a filamentous protein assembly.


Biomolecular Nmr Assignments | 2018

1 H, 13 C, 15 N NMR resonance assignments and secondary structure determination of the extra-cellular domain from the human proapoptotic TRAIL-R2 death receptor 5 (DR5-ECD)

Antoine Baudin; Anne Guichard; Gavin W. Collie; Sabrina Rousseau; Stéphane Chaignepain; Agnès Hocquellet; Mélanie Berbon; Antoine Loquet; Cameron D. Mackereth; Gilles Guichard; Benoit Odaert

Death receptors (DR) selectively drive cancer cells to apoptosis upon binding to the Tumor necrosis factor-a-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand (TRAIL). Complex formation induces the oligomerization of the death receptors DR4 (TRAIL-R1) and DR5 (TRAIL-R2) and transduces the apoptogenic signal to their respective death domains, leading to Death Inducing Signaling Complex (DISC) formation, caspase activation and ultimately cell death. Several crystal structures of the ExtraCellular Domain from Death Receptor 5 (DR5-ECD) have been reported in complex with the TRAIL ligand or anti-DR5 antibodies, but none for the isolated protein. In order to fill this gap and to perform binding experiments with TRAIL peptidomimetics, we have produced isotopically labelled DR5-ECD and started a conformational analysis by using high-field 3D NMR spectroscopy. Herein, we present the first resonance assignment of a TRAIL receptor in solution and the determination of its secondary structure from NMR chemical shifts.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Zuordnung der Rückgrat- und Seitenketten-Protonen in vollständig protonierten Proteinen durch Festkörper-NMR-Spektroskopie: Mikrokristalle, Sedimente und Amyloidfibrillen

Jan Stanek; Loren B. Andreas; Kristaps Jaudzems; Diane Cala; D. Lalli; Andrea Bertarello; Tobias Schubeis; Inara Akopjana; Svetlana Kotelovica; Kaspars Tars; Andrea Pica; Serena Leone; Delia Picone; Zhi-Qiang Xu; Nicholas E. Dixon; Denis Martinez; Mélanie Berbon; Nadia El Mammeri; Abdelmajid Noubhani; Sven J. Saupe; Birgit Habenstein; Antoine Loquet; Guido Pintacuda


Methods | 2018

3D Structure Determination of Amyloid Fibrils using Solid-State NMR Spectroscopy

Antoine Loquet; Nadia El Mammeri; Jan Stanek; Mélanie Berbon; Benjamin Bardiaux; Guido Pintacuda; Birgit Habenstein


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 2018

Detection of side-chain proton resonances of fully protonated biosolids in nano-litre volumes by magic angle spinning solid-state NMR

James Tolchard; Manoj Pandey; Mélanie Berbon; Abdelmajid Noubhani; Sven J. Saupe; Yusuke Nishiyama; Birgit Habenstein; Antoine Loquet


Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation | 2018

Assignment of 1H, 13C and 15N resonances of the extrecclular domain of human Death Receptor DR5

Benoit Odaert; Antoine Baudin; Mélanie Berbon; Cameron D. Mackereth; Gilles Guichard


Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation | 2018

Solid-state MAS NMR structure of the HELLF prion amyloid fibrils

Denis Martinez; A. Daskalov; Loren B. Andreas; B. Bardiaux; V. Coustou; Jan Stanek; Mélanie Berbon; M. Noubhani; B. Kauffmann; J.S. Wall; G. Pintacuda; S.J. Saupe; Birgit Habenstein; Antoine Loquet

Collaboration


Dive into the Mélanie Berbon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kristaps Jaudzems

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge