Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michel Guertin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michel Guertin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Truncated hemoglobin HbN protects Mycobacterium bovis from nitric oxide

Hugues Ouellet; Yannick Ouellet; Christian Richard; Marie LaBarre; Beatrice A. Wittenberg; Jonathan B. Wittenberg; Michel Guertin

Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis, and Mycobacteriumbovis each express two genes, glbN and glbO, encoding distantly related truncated hemoglobins (trHbs), trHbN and trHbO, respectively. Here we report that disruption of M. bovis bacillus Calmette–Guérin glbN caused a dramatic reduction in the NO-consuming activity of stationary phase cells, and that activity could be restored fully by complementing knockout cells with glbN. Aerobic respiration of knockout cells was inhibited markedly by NO in comparison to that of wild-type cells, indicating a protective function for trHbN. TyrB10, which is highly conserved in trHbs and interacts with the bound oxygen, was found essential for NO consumption. Titration of oxygenated trHbN (trHbN⋅O2) with NO resulted in stoichiometric oxidation of the protein with nitrate as the major product of the reaction. The second-order rate constant for the reaction between trHbN⋅O2 and NO at 23°C was 745 μM−1⋅s−1, demonstrating that trHbN detoxifies NO 20-fold more rapidly than myoglobin. These results establish a role for a trHb and demonstrate an NO-metabolizing activity in M. tuberculosis or M. bovis. trHbN thus might play an important role in persistence of mycobacterial infection by virtue of trHbN′s ability to detoxify NO.


The EMBO Journal | 2000

A novel two-over-two alpha-helical sandwich fold is characteristic of the truncated hemoglobin family.

Alessandra Pesce; Manon Couture; Sylvia Dewilde; Michel Guertin; Kiyoshi Yamauchi; Paolo Ascenzi; Luc Moens; Martino Bolognesi

Small hemoproteins displaying amino acid sequences 20–40 residues shorter than (non‐)vertebrate hemoglobins (Hbs) have recently been identified in several pathogenic and non‐pathogenic unicellular organisms, and named ‘truncated hemoglobins’ (trHbs). They have been proposed to be involved not only in oxygen transport but also in other biological functions, such as protection against reactive nitrogen species, photosynthesis or to act as terminal oxidases. Crystal structures of trHbs from the ciliated protozoan Paramecium caudatum and the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas eugametos show that the tertiary structure of both proteins is based on a ‘two‐over‐two’ α‐helical sandwich, reflecting an unprecedented editing of the classical ‘three‐over‐three’ α‐helical globin fold. Based on specific Gly–Gly motifs the tertiary structure accommodates the deletion of the N‐terminal A‐helix and replacement of the crucial heme‐binding F‐helix with an extended polypeptide loop. Additionally, concerted structural modifications allow burying of the heme group and define the distal site, which hosts a TyrB10, GlnE7 residue pair. A set of structural and amino acid sequence consensus rules for stabilizing the fold and the bound heme in the trHbs homology subfamily is deduced.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Mycobacterium tuberculosis hemoglobin N displays a protein tunnel suited for O2 diffusion to the heme

Mario Milani; Alessandra Pesce; Yannick Ouellet; Paolo Ascenzi; Michel Guertin; Martino Bolognesi

Macrophage‐generated oxygen‐ and nitrogen‐reactive species control the development of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in the host. Mycobacterium tuberculosis ‘truncated hemoglobin’ N (trHbN) has been related to nitric oxide (NO) detoxification, in response to macrophage nitrosative stress, during the bacterium latent infection stage. The three‐dimensional structure of oxygenated trHbN, solved at 1.9 Å resolution, displays the two‐over‐two α‐helical sandwich fold recently characterized in two homologous truncated hemoglobins, featuring an extra N‐terminal α‐helix and homodimeric assembly. In the absence of a polar distal E7 residue, the O2 heme ligand is stabilized by two hydrogen bonds to TyrB10(33). Strikingly, ligand diffusion to the heme in trHbN may occur via an apolar tunnel/cavity system extending for ∼28 Å through the protein matrix, connecting the heme distal cavity to two distinct protein surface sites. This unique structural feature appears to be conserved in several homologous truncated hemoglobins. It is proposed that in trHbN, heme Fe/O2 stereochemistry and the protein matrix tunnel may promote O2/NO chemistry in vivo, as a M.tuberculosis defense mechanism against macrophage nitrosative stress.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

A Cooperative Oxygen Binding Hemoglobin from Mycobacterium tuberculosis STABILIZATION OF HEME LIGANDS BY A DISTAL TYROSINE RESIDUE

Syun Ru Yeh; Manon Couture; Yannick Ouellet; Michel Guertin; Denis L. Rousseau

The homodimeric hemoglobin (HbN) fromMycobacterium tuberculosis displays an extremely high oxygen binding affinity and cooperativity. Sequence alignment with other hemoglobins suggests that the proximal F8 ligand is histidine, the distal E7 residue is leucine, and the B10 position is occupied by tyrosine. To determine how these heme pocket residues regulate the ligand binding affinities and physiological functions of HbN, we have measured the resonance Raman spectra of the O2, CO, and OH− derivatives of the wild type protein and the B10 Tyr → Leu and Phe mutants. Taken together these data demonstrate a unique distal environment in which the heme bound ligands strongly interact with the B10 tyrosine residue. The implications of these data on the physiological functions of HbN and another heme-containing protein, cytochrome c oxidase, are considered.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

A TyrCD1/TrpG8 hydrogen bond network and a TyrB10-TyrCD1 covalent link shape the heme distal site of Mycobacterium tuberculosis hemoglobin O

Mario Milani; Pierre Savard; Hugues Ouellet; Paolo Ascenzi; Michel Guertin; Martino Bolognesi

Truncated hemoglobins (Hbs) are small hemoproteins, identified in microorganisms and in some plants, forming a separate cluster within the Hb superfamily. Two distantly related truncated Hbs, trHbN and trHbO, are expressed at different developmental stages in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Sequence analysis shows that the two proteins share 18% amino acid identities and belong to different groups within the truncated Hb cluster. Although a specific defense role against nitrosative stress has been ascribed to trHbN (expressed during the Mycobacterium stationary phase), no clear functions have been recognized for trHbO, which is expressed throughout the Mycobacterium growth phase. The 2.1-Å crystal structure of M. tuberculosis cyano-met trHbO shows that the protein assembles in a compact dodecamer. Six of the dodecamer subunits are characterized by a double conformation for their CD regions and, most notably, by a covalent bond linking the phenolic O atom of TyrB10 to the aromatic ring of TyrCD1, in the heme distal cavity. All 12 subunits display a cyanide ion bound to the heme Fe atom, stabilized by a tight hydrogen-bonded network based on the (globin very rare) TyrCD1 and TrpG8 residues. The small apolar AlaE7 residue leaves room for ligand access to the heme distal site through the conventional “E7 path,” as proposed for myoglobin. Different from trHbN, where a 20-Å protein matrix tunnel is held to sustain ligand diffusion to an otherwise inaccessible heme distal site, the topologically related region in trHbO hosts two protein matrix cavities.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Chlamydomonas Chloroplast Ferrous Hemoglobin HEME POCKET STRUCTURE AND REACTIONS WITH LIGANDS

Manon Couture; Tapan Kanti Das; Hyangkyu Lee; Jack Peisach; Denis L. Rousseau; Beatrice A. Wittenberg; Jonathan B. Wittenberg; Michel Guertin

We report the optical and resonance Raman spectral characterization of ferrous recombinantChlamydomonas LI637 hemoglobin. We show that it is present in three pH-dependent equilibrium forms including a 4-coordinate species at acid pH, a 5-coordinate high spin species at neutral pH, and a 6-coordinate low spin species at alkaline pH. The proximal ligand to the heme is the imidazole group of a histidine. Kinetics of the reactions with ligands were determined by stopped-flow spectroscopy. At alkaline pH, combination with oxygen, nitric oxide, and carbon monoxide displays a kinetic behavior that is interpreted as being rate-limited by conversion of the 6-coordinate form to a reactive 5-coordinate form. At neutral pH, combination rates of the 5-coordinate form with oxygen and carbon monoxide were much faster (>107 μm −1 s−1). The dissociation rate constant measured for oxygen is among the slowest known, 0.014 s−1, and is independent of pH. Replacement of the tyrosine 63 (B10) by leucine or of the putative distal glutamine by glycine increases the dissociation rate constant 70- and 30-fold and increases the rate of autoxidation 20- and 90-fold, respectively. These results are consistent with at least two hydrogen bonds stabilizing the bound oxygen molecule, one from tyrosine B10 and the other from the distal glutamine. In addition, the high frequency (232 cm−1) of the iron-histidine bond suggests a structure that lacks any proximal strain thus contributing to high ligand affinity.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1992

The early genetic response to light in the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas eugametos grown under light/dark cycles involves genes that represent direct responses to light and photosynthesis

Ginette Gagné; Michel Guertin

In the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas eugametos, cellular division is readily synchronized by light/dark cycles. Under these conditions, light initiates photosynthetic growth in daughter cells and begins the G1 phase. Genes whose expression is regulated upon illumination are likely to be important mechanisms controlling cell proliferation. To identify some of those genes, two cDNA libraries were prepared with poly(A)+ extracted from cells either stimulated with light for 1 h or held in darkness (quiescent cells) during the same period. To restrict our analysis to those genes that are part of the primary response, cells were incubated in presence of cycloheximide. Differential screening of approximately 40 000 clones in each library revealed 44 clones which hybridize preferentially with a [32P] cDNA probe derived from RNA of light-stimulated cells and 15 clones which react selectively with a [32P] cDNA probe synthesized from poly(A)+ RNA of quiescent cells. Cross-hybridization of these clones identified 4 independent sequences in the light-induced (LI) collection and 2 in the uninduced (LR) library. Four of these cDNAs correspond to mRNAs that are positively or negatively regulated upon activation of photosynthesis. One clone represents a mRNA that accumulates transitorily at both transitions. Finally, LI818 cDNA identifies a new chlorophyll a/b-binding (cab) gene family whose mRNA accumulation is controlled by light and a circadian oscillator. The endogenous timing system controls LI818 mRNA accumulation so that it precedes the onset of illumination by a few hours. On the other hand, light affects LI818 mRNA levels independently of active photosynthesis.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1996

The Chlamydomonas reinhardtii LI818 gene represents a distant relative of the cabI/II genes that is regulated during the cell cycle and in response to illumination

Frédéric Savard; Christian Richard; Michel Guertin

In the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, as in higher plants, the expression of the genes encoding the chlorophyll a/b-binding (CAB) polypeptides associated with photosystem I (PSI) and photosystem II (PSII) is regulated by endogenous (circadian clock) and exogenous signals (light and temperature). The circadian clock ensures that the oscillation in the levels of the different cab mRNAs is continuously kept in phase with light/dark (LD) cycles and is maximal by the middle of the day. On the other hand, light controls the amplitude of the oscillations. We report here the cloning and characterization of the C. reinhardtii LI818 gene, which identifies a CAB-related polypeptide and whose expression is regulated quite differently from the cabI/II genes. We show: (1) that in LD synchronized Chlamydomonas cells LI818 mRNA accumulation is subject to dual regulation that involves separable regulation by light and an endogenous oscillator; (2) that LI818 mRNA is fully expressed several hours before the cab I/II mRNAs and that the latter accumulate concomitantly; (3) that blocking the electron flow through PSII using DCMU prevents cells from accumulating cab I/II mRNAs but not LI818 mRNA and (4) that the accumulation of LI818 mRNA is abolished by blocking cytoplasmic protein synthesis, suggesting that these regulatory mechanisms are mediated by labile proteins.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1994

Nuclear genes encoding chloroplast hemoglobins in the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas eugametos.

Manon Couture; Hélène Chamberland; Benoit St-Pierre; J. G. Lafontaine; Michel Guertin

When the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas eugametos is grown under light/dark regimes, nuclear genes are periodically activated in response to the changes in light conditions. These genetic responses are dependent upon the activation of genes associated with photosynthesis (LI616 and LI637), nonphotosynthetic photoreceptors (LI410 and LI818) and the biological clock (LI818). We report here that the LI410 and LI637 genes are part of a small gene family encoding hemoglobins (Hbs) related to those from two unicellular eukaryotes, the ciliated protozoa Paramecium caudatum and Tetrahymena pyriformis, and from the cyanobacterium Nostoc commune. Investigations of the intracellular localization of C. eugametos Hbs by means of immunogold electron microscopy indicate that these proteins are predominantly located in the chloroplast, particularly in the pyrenoid and the thylakoid region. To our knowledge, this constitutes the first evidence for the presence of Hbs in chloroplasts. Alignment of the LI637 cDNA nucleotide sequence with its corresponding genomic sequence indicates that the L1637 gene contains three introns, the positions of which are compared with those in the Hb genes of plants, animals and the ciliate P. caudatum. Although the LI637 gene possesses a three-intron/four-exon pattern similar to that of plant leghemoglobin genes, introns are inserted at different positions. Similarly the position of the single intron in the P. caudatum gene differs from the intron sites in the LI637 gene. The latter observations argue against the current view that all eukaryotic Hbs have evolved from a common ancestor having a gene structure identical to that of plant or animal Hbs.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2000

Characterization of the LI818 polypeptide from the green unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

Christian Richard; Hugues Ouellet; Michel Guertin

The LI818 gene from Chlamydomonas encodes a polypeptide that is related to the chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins (CAB) of higher plants and green algae. However, despite this relatedness, LI818 gene expression is not coordinated with that of cab genes and is regulated differently by light, suggesting a different role for LI818 polypeptide. We show here that, in contrast to CAB polypeptides, LI818 polypeptide is not tightly embedded into the thylakoid membranes and is localized in stroma-exposed regions. Moreover, during chloroplast development, LI818 polypeptide accumulates before CAB polypeptides. We also show that the LI818 polypeptide forms with certain chlorophyll a/c-binding proteins (CAC) from the haptophyte Isochrysis galbana and the diatom Cyclotella cryptica a natural group that is distinct from those constituted by CAB, CAC and the chlorophyll a/a-binding proteins (CAA). Such an association suggests a very ancient origin for this group of polypeptides, which predates the division of the early photosynthetic eukaryotes into green (chlorophyte), red (rhodophyte) and brown (chromophyte) algae. Possible roles for the LI818 polypeptide are discussed.

Collaboration


Dive into the Michel Guertin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jonathan B. Wittenberg

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Beatrice A. Wittenberg

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hugues Ouellet

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joel M. Friedman

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge