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Dive into the research topics where Oscar Crasson is active.

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Featured researches published by Oscar Crasson.


Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2015

Enzymatic functionalization of a nanobody using protein insertion technology

Oscar Crasson; Noureddine Rhazi; Olivier Jacquin; Astrid Freichels; Christine Jérôme; Nadia Ruth; Moreno Galleni; Patrice Filée; Marylène Vandevenne

Antibody-based products constitute one of the most attractive biological molecules for diagnostic, medical imagery and therapeutic purposes with very few side effects. Their development has become a major priority of biotech and pharmaceutical industries. Recently, a growing number of modified antibody-based products have emerged including fragments, multi-specific and conjugate antibodies. In this study, using protein engineering, we have functionalized the anti-hen egg-white lysozyme (HEWL) camelid VHH antibody fragment (cAb-Lys3), by insertion into a solvent-exposed loop of the Bacillus licheniformis β-lactamase BlaP. We showed that the generated hybrid protein conserved its enzymatic activity while the displayed nanobody retains its ability to inhibit HEWL with a nanomolar affinity range. Then, we successfully implemented the functionalized cAb-Lys3 in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, potentiometric biosensor and drug screening assays. The hybrid protein was also expressed on the surface of phage particles and, in this context, was able to interact specifically with HEWL while the β-lactamase activity was used to monitor phage interactions. Finally, using thrombin-cleavage sites surrounding the permissive insertion site in the β-lactamase, we reported an expression system in which the nanobody can be easily separated from its carrier protein. Altogether, our study shows that insertion into the BlaP β-lactamase constitutes a suitable technology to functionalize nanobodies and allows the creation of versatile tools that can be used in innovative biotechnological assays.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Human chitotriosidase: Catalytic domain or carbohydrate binding module, who's leading HCHT's biological function

Oscar Crasson; Gaston Courtade; Raphaël Léonard; Finn L. Aachmann; François Legrand; Raffaella Parente; Denis Baurain; Moreno Galleni; Morten Sørlie; Marylène Vandevenne

Chitin is an important structural component of numerous fungal pathogens and parasitic nematodes. The human macrophage chitotriosidase (HCHT) is a chitinase that hydrolyses glycosidic bonds between the N-acetyl-D-glucosamine units of this biopolymer. HCHT belongs to the Glycoside Hydrolase (GH) superfamily and contains a well-characterized catalytic domain appended to a chitin-binding domain (ChBDCHIT1). Although its precise biological function remains unclear, HCHT has been described to be involved in innate immunity. In this study, the molecular basis for interaction with insoluble chitin as well as with soluble chito-oligosaccharides has been determined. The results suggest a new mechanism as a common binding mode for many Carbohydrate Binding Modules (CBMs). Furthermore, using a phylogenetic approach, we have analysed the modularity of HCHT and investigated the evolutionary paths of its catalytic and chitin binding domains. The phylogenetic analyses indicate that the ChBDCHIT1 domain dictates the biological function of HCHT and not its appended catalytic domain. This observation may also be a general feature of GHs. Altogether, our data have led us to postulate and discuss that HCHT acts as an immune catalyser.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2017

Protein–polysaccharide complexes for enhanced protein delivery in hyaluronic acid templated calcium carbonate microparticles

Bathabile Ramalapa; Oscar Crasson; Marylène Vandevenne; Alain Gibaud; Emmanuel Garcion; Thomas Cordonnier; Moreno Galleni; Frank Boury

The controlled delivery of proteins within calcium carbonate (CaCO3) particles is currently widely investigated. The success of these carriers is driven by ionic interactions between the encapsulated proteins and the particles. This poses a great limitation on the successful loading of proteins that have no ionic affinity to CaCO3. In this study, we explored the use of polysaccharide-protein interactions to strongly enhance the encapsulation of proteins in CaCO3 microparticles. Previously, Vandevenne and colleagues inserted a human chitin binding domain (ChBD) that has intrinsic affinity for hyaluronic acid (HA) into a β-lactamase (BlaP). This generated chimeric protein, named BlaPChBD, was shown to be fully bifunctional. In this study we showed that this hybrid protein can associate with HA and be successfully loaded into vaterite CaCO3 microparticles using supercritical CO2 (ScCO2) technology aided by the templating effect of HA on CaCO3. The presence of ChBD inserted into BlaP increased the encapsulation of the protein by 6-fold when complexed with HA. Furthermore, thrombin cleavage sites were engineered on both sides of the inserted ChBD in the chimeric BlaP to achieve release of the protein from the microparticles by protease cleavage. Our results showed that thrombin cleavage increased the release of the protein from the microparticles within 36 hours from <20% to 87%. In conclusion, the presence of ChBD successfully improved the encapsulation yield of the protein while retaining up to 82% of its activity and efficient release of the protein from the microparticles was achieved by protease cleavage.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2018

The Use of a β-lactamase-based Conductimetric Biosensor Assay to Detect Biomolecular Interactions.

Marylène Vandevenne; Mathieu Dondelinger; Sami Yunus; Astrid Freischels; Régine Freischels; Oscar Crasson; Noureddine Rhazi; Pierre Bogaerts; Moreno Galleni; Patrice Filée

Biosensors are becoming increasingly important and implemented in various fields such as pathogen detection, molecular diagnosis, environmental monitoring, and food safety control. In this context, we used β-lactamases as efficient reporter enzymes in several protein-protein interaction studies. Furthermore, their ability to accept insertions of peptides or structured proteins/domains strongly encourages the use of these enzymes to generate chimeric proteins. In a recent study, we inserted a single-domain antibody fragment into the Bacillus licheniformis BlaP β-lactamase. These small domains, also called nanobodies, are defined as the antigen-binding domains of single chain antibodies from camelids. Like common double chain antibodies, they show high affinities and specificities for their targets. The resulting chimeric protein exhibited a high affinity against its target while retaining the β-lactamase activity. This suggests that the nanobody and β-lactamase moieties remain functional. In the present work, we report a detailed protocol that combines our hybrid β-lactamase system to the biosensor technology. The specific binding of the nanobody to its target can be detected thanks to a conductimetric measurement of the protons released by the catalytic activity of the enzyme.


Archive | 2017

Protein-polysaccharide complexes for improved protein delivery within CaCO3 microparticles

Bathabile Ramalapa; Oscar Crasson; Marylène Vandevenne; Moreno Galleni; Boury Frank


Archive | 2017

Improved encapsulation of proteins within calcium carbonate microparticles by means of protein-polysaccharide complexes

Bathabile Ramalapa; Oscar Crasson; Marylène Vandevenne; Moreno Galleni; Boury Frank


Archive | 2017

Protein-polysaccharide complexes, a tool for protein delivery in CaCO3 microparticles

Bathabile Ramalapa; Oscar Crasson; Marylène Vandevenne; Moreno Galleni; Boury Frank


Archive | 2016

The use of protein-polysaccharide complexes to enhance protein delivery in CaCO3 microparticles

Bathabile Ramalapa; Oscar Crasson; Marylène Vandevenne; Moreno Galleni; Frank Boury; Thomas Cordonnier


Archive | 2015

The hidden face of the human macrophage chitotriosidase: taking a new look at this enzyme based on the biochemical and phylogenomic analysis of its chitin binding domain

Oscar Crasson; François Legrand; Raphaël Léonard; Denis Baurain; Moreno Galleni; Marylène Vandevenne


Archive | 2014

How to build a biological linker dedicated to the engineering of novel drug delivery systems

Oscar Crasson; Moreno Galleni; Raffaella Parente; Marylène Vandevenne; Patrice Filée

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