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Dive into the research topics where Mickaël Castelain is active.

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Featured researches published by Mickaël Castelain.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Unraveling the role of surface mucus-binding protein and pili in muco-adhesion of Lactococcus lactis.

Doan Thanh Lam Le; Thi-Ly Tran; Marie-Pierre Duviau; Mickael Meyrand; Yann Guérardel; Mickaël Castelain; Pascal Loubière; Marie-Pierre Chapot-Chartier; Etienne Dague; Muriel Mercier-Bonin

Adhesion of bacteria to mucus may favor their persistence within the gut and their beneficial effects to the host. Interactions between pig gastric mucin (PGM) and a natural isolate of Lactococcus lactis (TIL448) were measured at the single-cell scale and under static conditions, using atomic force microscopy (AFM). In parallel, these interactions were monitored at the bacterial population level and under shear flow. AFM experiments with a L. lactis cell-probe and a PGM-coated surface revealed a high proportion of specific adhesive events (60%) and a low level of non-adhesive ones (2%). The strain muco-adhesive properties were confirmed by the weak detachment of bacteria from the PGM-coated surface under shear flow. In AFM, rupture events were detected at short (100−200 nm) and long distances (up to 600−800 nm). AFM measurements on pili and mucus-binding protein defective mutants demonstrated the comparable role played by these two surface proteinaceous components in adhesion to PGM under static conditions. Under shear flow, a more important contribution of the mucus-binding protein than the pili one was observed. Both methods differ by the way of probing the adhesion force, i.e. negative force contact vs. sedimentation and normal-to-substratum retraction vs. tangential detachment conditions, using AFM and flow chamber, respectively. AFM blocking assays with free PGM or O-glycan fractions purified from PGM demonstrated that neutral oligosaccharides played a major role in adhesion of L. lactis TIL448 to PGM. This study dissects L. lactis muco-adhesive phenotype, in relation with the nature of the bacterial surface determinants.


ChemPhysChem | 2009

Characterization of the Biomechanical Properties of T4 Pili Expressed by Streptococcus pneumoniae—A Comparison between Helix-like and Open Coil-like Pili

Mickaël Castelain; Efstratios Koutris; Magnus Andersson; Krister Wiklund; Oscar Björnham; Staffan Schedin; Ove Axner

Bacterial adhesion organelles, known as fimbria or pili, are expressed by gram-positive as well as gram-negative bacteria families. These appendages play a key role in the first steps of the invasion and infection processes, and they therefore provide bacteria with pathogenic abilities. To improve the knowledge of pili-mediated bacterial adhesion to host cells and how these pili behave under the presence of an external force, we first characterize, using force measuring optical tweezers, open coil-like T4 pili expressed by gram-positive Streptococcus pneumoniae with respect to their biomechanical properties. It is shown that their elongation behavior can be well described by the worm-like chain model and that they possess a large degree of flexibility. Their properties are then compared with those of helix-like pili expressed by gram-negative uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), which have different pili architecture. The differences suggest that these two types of pili have distinctly dissimilar mechanisms to adhere and sustain external forces. Helix-like pili expressed by UPEC bacteria adhere to host cells by single adhesins located at the distal end of the pili while their helix-like structures act as shock absorbers to dampen the irregularly shear forces induced by urine flow and to increase the cooperativity of the pili ensemble, whereas open coil-like pili expressed by S. pneumoniae adhere to cells by a multitude of adhesins distributed along the pili. It is hypothesized that these two types of pili represent different strategies of adhering to host cells in the presence of external forces. When exposed to significant forces, bacteria expressing helix-like pili remain attached by distributing the external force among a multitude of pili, whereas bacteria expressing open coil-like pili sustain large forces primarily by their multitude of binding adhesins which presumably detach sequentially.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2011

Assessing Bacterial Adhesion on an Individual Adhesin and Single Pili Level Using Optical Tweezers

Ove Axner; Magnus Andersson; Oscar Björnham; Mickaël Castelain; Jeanna Klinth; Efstratios Koutris; Staffan Schedin

Optical tweezers (OT) are a technique that, by focused laser light, can both manipulate micrometer sized objects and measure minute forces (in the pN range) in biological systems. The technique is therefore suitable for assessment of bacterial adhesion on an individual adhesin-receptor and single attachment organelle (pili) level. This chapter summarizes the use of OT for assessment of adhesion mechanisms of both non-piliated and piliated bacteria. The latter include the important helix-like pili expressed by uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), which have shown to have unique and intricate biomechanical properties. It is conjectured that the large flexibility of this type of pili allows for a redistribution of an external shear force among several pili, thereby extending the adhesion lifetime of bacteria. Systems with helix-like adhesion organelles may therefore act as dynamic biomechanical machineries, enhancing the ability of bacteria to withstand high shear forces originating from rinsing flows such as in the urinary tract. This implies that pili constitute an important virulence factor and a possible target for future anti-microbial drugs.


Nobel Symposium 138: Single Molecule Spectroscopy in Chemistry, Physics and Biosciences, Jun 01-06, 2008, Sanga-Saby, SWEDEN | 2010

Unraveling the Secrets of Bacterial Adhesion Organelles Using Single-Molecule Force Spectroscopy

Ove Axner; Oscar Björnham; Mickaël Castelain; Efstratios Koutris; Staffan Schedin; Erik Fällman; Magnus Andersson

Many types of bacterium express micrometer-long attachment organelles (so called pili) whose role is to mediate adhesion to host tissue. Until recently, little was known about their function in the ...


PLOS ONE | 2012

The Influence of pH on the Specific Adhesion of P Piliated Escherichia coli

Jeanna Klinth; Mickaël Castelain; Bernt Eric Uhlin; Ove Axner

Adhesion to host tissues is an initiating step in a majority of bacterial infections. In the case of Gram-negative bacteria this adhesion is often mediated by a specific interaction between an adhesin, positioned at the distal end of bacterial pili, and its receptor on the surface of the host tissue. Furthermore, the rod of the pilus, and particularly its biomechanical properties, is believed to be crucial for the ability of bacteria to withstand external forces caused by, for example, (in the case of urinary tract infections) urinary rinsing flows by redistributing the force to several pili. In this work, the adhesion properties of P-piliated E. coli and their dependence of pH have been investigated in a broad pH range by both the surface plasmon resonance technique and force measuring optical tweezers. We demonstrate that P piliated bacteria have an adhesion ability throughout the entire physiologically relevant pH range (pH 4.5 – 8). We also show that pH has a higher impact on the binding rate than on the binding stability or the biomechanical properties of pili; the binding rate was found to have a maximum around pH 5 while the binding stability was found to have a broader distribution over pH and be significant over the entire physiologically relevant pH range. Force measurements on a single organelle level show that the biomechanical properties of P pili are not significantly affected by pH.


Microorganisms | 2018

The Role of Glycans in Bacterial Adhesion to Mucosal Surfaces: How Can Single-Molecule Techniques Advance Our Understanding?

Cécile Formosa-Dague; Mickaël Castelain; Hélène Martin-Yken; Karen Dunker; Etienne Dague; Marit Sletmoen

Bacterial adhesion is currently the subject of increased interest from the research community, leading to fast progress in our understanding of this complex phenomenon. Resent research within this field has documented the important roles played by glycans for bacterial surface adhesion, either through interaction with lectins or with other glycans. In parallel with this increased interest for and understanding of bacterial adhesion, there has been a growth in the sophistication and use of sensitive force probes for single-molecule and single cell studies. In this review, we highlight how the sensitive force probes atomic force microscopy (AFM) and optical tweezers (OT) have contributed to clarifying the mechanisms underlying bacterial adhesion to glycosylated surfaces in general and mucosal surfaces in particular. We also describe research areas where these techniques have not yet been applied, but where their capabilities appear appropriate to advance our understanding.


European Biophysics Journal | 2011

Fast uncoiling kinetics of F1C pili expressed by uropathogenic Escherichia coli are revealed on a single pilus level using force-measuring optical tweezers

Mickaël Castelain; Sarah Ehlers; Jeanna Klinth; Stina Lindberg; Magnus Andersson; Bernt Eric Uhlin; Ove Axner


European Biophysics Journal | 2010

Unfolding and refolding properties of S pili on extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli

Mickaël Castelain; Annika E. Sjöström; Erik Fällman; Bernt Eric Uhlin; Magnus Andersson


arXiv: Biological Physics | 2014

The biomechanical properties of F1C pili

Mickaël Castelain; Sarah Ehlers; Jeanna Klinth; Stina Lindberg; Magnus Andersson; Bernt Eric Uhlin; Ove Axner


European Biophysics Journal | 2009

Helixlike pili is a prerequisite of uropathogenic E. coli to adhere to host and withstand urine flow

Mickaël Castelain; Magnus Andersson; Efstratios Koutris; Ove Axner

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