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Dive into the research topics where Olivier Piétrement is active.

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Featured researches published by Olivier Piétrement.


Cell | 2007

A Key Presynaptic Role in Transformation for a Widespread Bacterial Protein: DprA Conveys Incoming ssDNA to RecA

Isabelle Mortier‐Barrière; Marion Velten; Pauline Dupaigne; Nicolas Mirouze; Olivier Piétrement; Stephen McGovern; Gwennaele Fichant; Bernard Martin; Philippe Noirot; Eric Le Cam; Patrice Polard; Jean-Pierre Claverys

Natural transformation is a mechanism for genetic exchange in many bacterial genera. It proceeds through the uptake of exogenous DNA and subsequent homology-dependent integration into the genome. In Streptococcus pneumoniae, this integration requires the ubiquitous recombinase, RecA, and DprA, a protein of unknown function widely conserved in bacteria. To unravel the role of DprA, we have studied the properties of the purified S. pneumoniae protein and its Bacillus subtilis ortholog (Smf). We report that DprA and Smf bind cooperatively to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and that these proteins both self-interact and interact with RecA. We demonstrate that DprA-RecA-ssDNA filaments are produced and that these filaments catalyze the homology-dependent formation of joint molecules. Finally, we show that while the Escherichia coli ssDNA-binding protein SSB limits access of RecA to ssDNA, DprA lowers this barrier. We propose that DprA is a new member of the recombination-mediator protein family, dedicated to natural bacterial transformation.


Biophysical Journal | 2003

Adsorption of DNA to Mica Mediated by Divalent Counterions: A Theoretical and Experimental Study

David Pastré; Olivier Piétrement; Stéphane Fusil; Fabrice Landousy; Josette Jeusset; Marie-Odile David; Loic Hamon; Eric Le Cam; Alain Zozime

The adsorption of DNA molecules onto a flat mica surface is a necessary step to perform atomic force microscopy studies of DNA conformation and observe DNA-protein interactions in physiological environment. However, the phenomenon that pulls DNA molecules onto the surface is still not understood. This is a crucial issue because the DNA/surface interactions could affect the DNA biological functions. In this paper we develop a model that can explain the mechanism of the DNA adsorption onto mica. This model suggests that DNA attraction is due to the sharing of the DNA and mica counterions. The correlations between divalent counterions on both the negatively charged DNA and the mica surface can generate a net attraction force whereas the correlations between monovalent counterions are ineffective in the DNA attraction. DNA binding is then dependent on the fractional surface densities of the divalent and monovalent cations, which can compete for the mica surface and DNA neutralizations. In addition, the attraction can be enhanced when the mica has been pretreated by transition metal cations (Ni(2+), Zn(2+)). Mica pretreatment simultaneously enhances the DNA attraction and reduces the repulsive contribution due to the electrical double-layer force. We also perform end-to-end distance measurement of DNA chains to study the binding strength. The DNA binding strength appears to be constant for a fixed fractional surface density of the divalent cations at low ionic strength (I < 0.1 M) as predicted by the model. However, at higher ionic strength, the binding is weakened by the screening effect of the ions. Then, some equations were derived to describe the binding of a polyelectrolyte onto a charged surface. The electrostatic attraction due to the sharing of counterions is particularly effective if the polyelectrolyte and the surface have nearly the same surface charge density. This characteristic of the attraction force can explain the success of mica for performing single DNA molecule observation by AFM. In addition, we explain how a reversible binding of the DNA molecules can be obtained with a pretreated mica surface.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

High-resolution AFM imaging of single-stranded DNA-binding (SSB) protein—DNA complexes

Loı̈c Hamon; David Pastré; Pauline Dupaigne; Cyrille Le Breton; Eric Le Cam; Olivier Piétrement

DNA in living cells is generally processed via the generation and the protection of single-stranded DNA involving the binding of ssDNA-binding proteins (SSBs). The studies of SSB-binding mode transition and cooperativity are therefore critical to many cellular processes like DNA repair and replication. However, only a few atomic force microscopy (AFM) investigations of ssDNA nucleoprotein filaments have been conducted so far. The point is that adsorption of ssDN A–SSB complexes on mica, necessary for AFM imaging, is not an easy task. Here, we addressed this issue by using spermidine as a binding agent. This trivalent cation induces a stronger adsorption on mica than divalent cations, which are commonly used by AFM users but are ineffective in the adsorption of ssDNA–SSB complexes. At low spermidine concentration (<0.3 mM), we obtained AFM images of ssDNA–SSB complexes (E. coli SSB, gp32 and yRPA) on mica at both low and high ionic strengths. In addition, partially or fully saturated nucleoprotein filaments were studied at various monovalent salt concentrations thus allowing the observation of SSB-binding mode transition. In association with conventional biochemical techniques, this work should make it possible to study the dynamics of DNA processes involving DNA–SSB complexes as intermediates by AFM.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Structural characterization of filaments formed by human Xrcc4–Cernunnos/XLF complex involved in nonhomologous DNA end-joining

Virginie Ropars; Pascal Drevet; Pierre Legrand; Sonia Baconnais; Jeremy Amram; Guilhem Faure; José A. Márquez; Olivier Piétrement; Raphaël Guerois; Isabelle Callebaut; Eric Le Cam; Patrick Revy; Jean-Pierre de Villartay; Jean-Baptiste Charbonnier

Cernunnos/XLF is a core protein of the nonhomologous DNA end-joining (NHEJ) pathway that processes the majority of DNA double-strand breaks in mammals. Cernunnos stimulates the final ligation step catalyzed by the complex between DNA ligase IV and Xrcc4 (X4). Here we present the crystal structure of the X41–157-Cernunnos1–224 complex at 5.5-Å resolution and identify the relative positions of the two factors and their binding sites. The X-ray structure reveals a filament arrangement for X41–157 and Cernunnos1–224 homodimers mediated by repeated interactions through their N-terminal head domains. A filament arrangement of the X4–Cernunnos complex was confirmed by transmission electron microscopy analyses both with truncated and full-length proteins. We further modeled the interface and used structure-based site-directed mutagenesis and calorimetry to characterize the roles of various residues at the X4–Cernunnos interface. We identified four X4 residues (Glu55, Asp58, Met61, and Phe106) essential for the interaction with Cernunnos. These findings provide new insights into the molecular bases for stimulatory and bridging roles of Cernunnos in the final DNA ligation step.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Free mRNA in excess upon polysome dissociation is a scaffold for protein multimerization to form stress granules.

Ouissame Bounedjah; Bénédicte Desforges; Ting-Di Wu; Catherine Pioche-Durieu; Sergio Marco; Loic Hamon; Patrick A. Curmi; Jean-Luc Guerquin-Kern; Olivier Piétrement; David Pastré

The sequence of events leading to stress granule assembly in stressed cells remains elusive. We show here, using isotope labeling and ion microprobe, that proportionally more RNA than proteins are present in stress granules than in surrounding cytoplasm. We further demonstrate that the delivery of single strand polynucleotides, mRNA and ssDNA, to the cytoplasm can trigger stress granule assembly. On the other hand, increasing the cytoplasmic level of mRNA-binding proteins like YB-1 can directly prevent the aggregation of mRNA by forming isolated mRNPs, as evidenced by atomic force microscopy. Interestingly, we also discovered that enucleated cells do form stress granules, demonstrating that the translocation to the cytoplasm of nuclear prion-like RNA-binding proteins like TIA-1 is dispensable for stress granule assembly. The results lead to an alternative view on stress granule formation based on the following sequence of events: after the massive dissociation of polysomes during stress, mRNA-stabilizing proteins like YB-1 are outnumbered by the burst of nonpolysomal mRNA. mRNA freed of ribosomes thus becomes accessible to mRNA-binding aggregation-prone proteins or misfolded proteins, which induces stress granule formation. Within the frame of this model, the shuttling of nuclear mRNA-stabilizing proteins to the cytoplasm could dissociate stress granules or prevent their assembly.


ACS Nano | 2013

Guided Assembly of Tetramolecular G-Quadruplexes

Liliya A. Yatsunyk; Olivier Piétrement; Delphine Albrecht; Phong Lan Thao Tran; Daniel Renčiuk; Hiroshi Sugiyama; Jean-Michel Arbona; Jean-Pierre Aimé; Jean-Louis Mergny

Nucleic acids are finding applications in nanotechnology as nanomaterials, mechanical devices, templates, and biosensors. G-quadruplex DNA, formed by π-π stacking of guanine (G) quartets, is an attractive alternative to regular B-DNA because of the kinetic and thermodynamic stability of quadruplexes. However, they suffer from a fatal flaw: the rules of recognition, i.e., the formation of a G-quartet in which four identical bases are paired, prevent the controlled assembly between different strands, leading to complex mixtures. In this report, we present the solution to this recognition problem. The proposed design combines two DNA elements: parallel-stranded duplexes and a quadruplex core. Parallel-stranded duplexes direct controlled assembly of the quadruplex core, and their strands present convenient points of attachments for potential modifiers. The exceptional stability of the quadruplex core provides integrity to the entire structure, which could be used as a building block for nucleic acid-based nanomaterials. As a proof of principle for the designs versatility, we assembled quadruplex-based 1D structures and visualized them using atomic force and transmission electron microscopy. Our findings pave the way to broader utilization of G-quadruplex DNA in structural DNA nanomaterials.


Langmuir | 2010

Specific DNA-protein interactions on mica investigated by atomic force microscopy.

David Pastré; Loïc Hamon; Isabelle Sorel; Eric Le Cam; Patrick A. Curmi; Olivier Piétrement

DNA processing by site-specific proteins on surface remains a challenging issue for nanobioscience applications and, in particular, for high-resolution imaging by atomic force microscopy (AFM). To obtain high-resolution conditions, mica, an atomically flat and negatively charged surface, is generally used. However, even though many specific DNA/protein interactions have already been observed by AFM, little is known about DNA accessibility to specific enzymes on mica. Here we measured the accessibility of adsorbed DNA to restriction endonucleases (EcoRI and EcoRV) using AFM. By increasing the concentration of divalent or multivalent salts, DNA adsorption on mica switches from weak to strong binding. Interestingly, while the accessibility of strongly bound DNA was inhibited, loosely adsorbed DNA was efficiently cleaved on mica. This result opens new perspective to study DNA/protein interaction by AFM or to modify specifically DNA on surface.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2014

Synthesis of a multibranched porphyrin–oligonucleotide scaffold for the construction of DNA-based nano-architectures

Guillaume Clavé; Grégory Chatelain; Arianna Filoramo; Didier Gasparutto; Christine Saint-Pierre; Eric Le Cam; Olivier Piétrement; Vincent Guérineau; Stéphane Campidelli

The interest in the functionalization of oligonucleotides with organic molecules has grown considerably over the last decade. In this work, we report on the synthesis and characterization of porphyrin-oligonucleotide hybrids containing one to four DNA strands (P1-P4). The hybrid P4, which inserts one porphyrin and four DNA fragments, was combined with gold nanoparticles and imaged by transmission electron microscopy.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Rad51 Polymerization Reveals a New Chromatin Remodeling Mechanism

Pauline Dupaigne; Christophe Lavelle; Anthony Justome; Sophie Lafosse; Gilles Mirambeau; Marc Lipinski; Olivier Piétrement; Eric Le Cam

Rad51 protein is a well known protagonist of homologous recombination in eukaryotic cells. Rad51 polymerization on single-stranded DNA and its role in presynaptic filament formation have been extensively documented. Rad51 polymerizes also on double-stranded DNA but the significance of this filament formation remains unclear. We explored the behavior of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad51 on dsDNA and the influence of nucleosomes on Rad51 polymerization mechanism to investigate its putative role in chromatin accessibility to recombination machinery. We combined biochemical approaches, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) for analysis of the effects of the Rad51 filament on chromatinized templates. Quantitative analyses clearly demonstrated the occurrence of chromatin remodeling during nucleoprotein filament formation. During Rad51 polymerization, recombinase proteins moved all the nucleosomal arrays in front of the progressing filament. This polymerization process had a powerful remodeling effect, as Rad51 destabilized the nucleosomes along considerable stretches of DNA. Similar behavior was observed with RecA. Thus, recombinase polymerization is a powerful mechanism of chromatin remodeling. These remarkable features open up new possibilities for understanding DNA recombination and reveal new types of ATP-dependent chromatin dynamics.


European Biophysics Journal | 2006

A new approach to DNA bending by polyamines and its implication in DNA condensation

David Pastré; Olivier Piétrement; Fabrice Landousy; Loic Hamon; Isabelle Sorel; Marie-Odile David; Etienne Delain; Alain Zozime; Eric Le Cam

Polyamines are known to induce dynamical bending of DNA molecules. This mechanism is very important since many DNA binding proteins (DNAse, transcription factor, etc.) exert their action by their ability to bend DNA. We propose an analytical model which describes the dynamical bending of DNA by polyamine ions in highly diluted DNA solutions. The bending probability depends on the entropy loss of polyamines due to their localization. This localization is facilitated by the electrostatic repulsion between multivalent counterions condensed on DNA, which reduces the entropy loss in counterion localization. Therefore DNA bending by polyamines depends on the competition between monovalent counterions and polyamines. We find that the bending probability is weak for a low binding ratio of polyamines (i.e. number of bound polyamines per base pair), whereas a high bending probability can be reached at large polyamine binding ratio. In addition, we describe a new mechanism of DNA bending. It occurs with the help of thermal agitation, which initiates the bending and favours the polyamine localization. This model provides further insights into DNA bending by polyamines and its implication in DNA condensation. A qualitative estimation of the DNA bending probability is obtained by measuring the cleavage efficiency of DNA by bleomycin versus spermidine concentration. Indeed, a local helix distortion by polyamines results in an amplification of the double-strand cleavage by bleomycin. The measurement of the bleomycin amplification is performed by analysing images of DNA molecules with atomic force microscope. Some features of the dynamical bending indicate that condensation and bending are interrelated.

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Eric Le Cam

Institut Gustave Roussy

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Christophe Lavelle

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Eduardo Ruiz-Hitzky

Spanish National Research Council

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Pilar Aranda

Spanish National Research Council

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