Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Patrice Vachette is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Patrice Vachette.


Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics | 2003

Small-angle scattering : a view on the properties, structures and structural changes of biological macromolecules in solution

Michel H. J. Koch; Patrice Vachette; Dmitri I. Svergun

A self-contained presentation of the main concepts and methods for interpretation of X-ray and neutron-scattering patterns of biological macromolecules in solution, including a reminder of the basics of X-ray and neutron scattering and a brief overview of relevant aspects of modern instrumentation, is given. For monodisperse solutions the experimental data yield the scattering intensity of the macromolecules, which depends on the contrast between the solvent and the particles as well as on their shape and internal scattering density fluctuations, and the structure factor, which is related to the interactions between macromolecules. After a brief analysis of the information content of the scattering intensity, the two main approaches for modelling the shape and/or structure of macromolecules and the global minimization schemes used in the calculations are presented. The first approach is based, in its more advanced version, on the spherical harmonics approximation and relies on few parameters, whereas the second one uses bead models with thousands of parameters. Extensions of bead modelling can be used to model domain structure and missing parts in high-resolution structures. Methods for computing the scattering patterns from atomic models including the contribution of the hydration shell are discussed and examples are given, which also illustrate that significant differences sometimes exist between crystal and solution structures. These differences are in some cases explainable in terms of rigid-body motions of parts of the structures. Results of two extensive studies--on ribosomes and on the allosteric protein aspartate transcarbamoylase--illustrate the application of the various methods. The unique bridge between equilibrium structures and thermodynamic or kinetic aspects provided by scattering techniques is illustrated by modelling of intermolecular interactions, including crystallization, based on an analysis of the structure factor and recent time-resolved work on assembly and protein folding.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1985

Quaternary structure changes in aspartate transcarbamylase studied by X-ray solution scattering: Signal transmission following effector binding☆

Guy Hervé; Michael F. Moody; Patrick Tauc; Patrice Vachette; Peter T. Jones

The result of binding the effectors ATP and CTP to aspartate transcarbamylase was studied by X-ray solution scattering. Binding of substrate analogues produces a substantial change in the solution scattering curve, allowing us to monitor the proportion of the different quaternary structure states present in solution. In the initial solution this ratio was made roughly unity by adding either carbamyl phosphate and succinate, or N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA). ATP or CTP were then added, and their effect on the proportion of the different quaternary structure states was followed. When using carbamyl phosphate and succinate (weakly bound), ATP or CTP had a clear effect, as observed previously by monitoring the sedimentation rate (Changeux et al., 1968). However, when PALA (strongly bound) was used, the effect of CTP was very much smaller, and that of ATP was undetectable. This result supports the explanation by Tauc et al. (1982), that nucleotides act mostly through changing the affinity of the active sites for substrate, and only to a small extent by directly modifying the quaternary structure equilibrium in the case of CTP.


Biophysical Journal | 2002

Salt-Induced Conformation and Interaction Changes of Nucleosome Core Particles

Stéphanie Mangenot; Amélie Leforestier; Patrice Vachette; D. Durand; Françoise Livolant

Small angle x-ray scattering was used to follow changes in the conformation and interactions of nucleosome core particles (NCP) as a function of the monovalent salt concentration C(s). The maximal extension (D(max)) of the NCP (145 +/- 3-bp DNA) increases from 137 +/- 5 A to 165 +/- 5 A when C(s) rises from 10 to 50 mM and remains constant with further increases of C(s) up to 200 mM. In view of the very weak increase of the R(g) value in the same C(s) range, we attribute this D(max) variation to tail extension, a proposal confirmed by simulations of the entire I(q) curves, considering an ideal solution of particles with tails either condensed or extended. This tail extension is observed at higher salt values when particles contain longer DNA fragments (165 +/- 10 bp). The maximal extension of the tails always coincides with the screening of repulsive interactions between particles. The second virial coefficient becomes smaller than the hard sphere virial coefficient and eventually becomes negative (net attractive interactions) for NCP(145). Addition of salt simultaneously screens Coulombic repulsive interactions between NCP and Coulombic attractive interactions between tails and DNA inside the NCP. We discuss how the coupling of these two phenomena may be of biological relevance.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Structural polymorphism of the major capsid protein of rotavirus

Jean Lepault; Isabelle Petitpas; Inge Erk; Jorge Navaza; Dominique Bigot; Michel Dona; Patrice Vachette; Jean Cohen; Felix A. Rey

Rotaviruses are important human pathogens with a triple‐layered icosahedral capsid. The major capsid protein VP6 is shown here to self‐assemble into spherical or helical particles mainly depending upon pH. Assembly is inhibited either by low pH (<3.0) or by a high concentration (>100 mM) of divalent cations (Ca2+ and Zn2+). The structures of two types of helical tubes were determined by electron cryomicroscopy and image analysis to a resolution of 2.0 and 2.5 nm. In both reconstructions, the molecular envelope of VP6 fits the atomic model determined by X‐ray crystallography remarkably well. The 3‐fold symmetry of the VP6 trimer, being incompatible with the helical symmetry, is broken at the level of the trimer contacts. One type of contact is maintained within all VP6 particles (tubes and virus), strongly suggesting that VP6 assemblies arise from different packings of a unique dimer of trimers. Our data show that the protonation state and thus the charge distribution are important switches governing the assembly of macromolecular assemblies.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003

Interconversion of ATP binding and conformational free energies by tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase: structures of ATP bound to open and closed, pre-transition-state conformations.

Pascal Retailleau; Xin Huang; Yuhui Yin; Mei Hu; Violetta Weinreb; Patrice Vachette; Clemens Vonrhein; Gérard Bricogne; Pietro Roversi; V. Ilyin; Charles W. Carter

Binding ATP to tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase (TrpRS) in a catalytically competent configuration for amino acid activation destabilizes the enzyme structure prior to forming the transition state. This conclusion follows from monitoring the titration of TrpRS with ATP by small angle solution X-ray scattering, enzyme activity, and crystal structures. ATP induces a significantly smaller radius of gyration at pH=7 with a transition midpoint at approximately 8mM. A non-reciprocal dependence of Trp and ATP dissociation constants on concentrations of the second substrate show that Trp binding enhances affinity for ATP, while the affinity for Trp falls with the square of the [ATP] over the same concentration range ( approximately 5mM) that induces the more compact conformation. Two distinct TrpRS:ATP structures have been solved, a high-affinity complex grown with 1mM ATP and a low-affinity complex grown at 10mM ATP. The former is isomorphous with unliganded TrpRS and the Trp complex from monoclinic crystals. Reacting groups of the two individually-bound substrates are separated by 6.7A. Although it lacks tryptophan, the low-affinity complex has a closed conformation similar to that observed in the presence of both ATP and Trp analogs such as indolmycin, and resembles a complex previously postulated to form in the closely-related TyrRS upon induced-fit active-site assembly, just prior to catalysis. Titration of TrpRS with ATP therefore successively produces structurally distinct high- and low-affinity ATP-bound states. The higher quality X-ray data for the closed ATP complex (2.2A) provide new structural details likely related to catalysis, including an extension of the KMSKS loop that engages the second lysine and serine residues, K195 and S196, with the alpha and gamma-phosphates; interactions of the K111 side-chain with the gamma-phosphate; and a water molecule bridging the consensus sequence residue T15 to the beta-phosphate. Induced-fit therefore strengthens active-site interactions with ATP, substantially intensifying the interaction of the KMSKS loop with the leaving PP(i) group. Formation of this conformation in the absence of a Trp analog implies that ATP is a key allosteric effector for TrpRS. The paradoxical requirement for high [ATP] implies that Gibbs binding free energy is stored in an unfavorable protein conformation and can then be recovered for useful purposes, including catalysis in the case of TrpRS.


Proteins | 1997

Large Differences Are Observed Between the Crystal and Solution Quaternary Structures of Allosteric Aspartate Transcarbamylase in the R State

Dmitri I. Svergun; Claudio Barberato; Michel H. J. Koch; Luc Fetler; Patrice Vachette

Solution scattering curves evaluated from the crystal structures of the T and R states of the allosteric enzyme aspartate transcarbamylase from Escherichia coli were compared with the experimental x‐ray scattering patterns. Whereas the scattering from the crystal structure of the T state agrees with the experiment, large deviations reflecting a significant difference between the quaternary structures in the crystal and in solution are observed for the R state. The experimental curve of the R state was fitted by rigid body movements of the subunits in the crystal R structure which displace the latter further away from the T structure along the reaction coordinates of the T→R transition observed in the crystals. Taking the crystal R structure as a reference, it was found that in solution the distance between the catalytic trimers along the threefold axis is 0.34 nm larger and the trimers are rotated by 11° in opposite directions around the same axis; each of the three regulatory dimers is rotated by 9° around the corresponding twofold axis and displaced by 0.14 nm away from the molecular center along this axis. Proteins 27:110–117


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

DC-SIGN Neck Domain Is a pH-sensor Controlling Oligomerization SAXS AND HYDRODYNAMIC STUDIES OF EXTRACELLULAR DOMAIN

Georges Tabarani; Michel Thépaut; David Stroebel; Christine Ebel; Corinne Vivès; Patrice Vachette; D. Durand; Franck Fieschi

DC-SIGN is a C-type lectin receptor of dendritic cells and is involved in the early stages of numerous infectious diseases. DC-SIGN is organized into a tetramer enabling multivalent interaction with pathogens. Once formed, the DC-SIGN-pathogen complex can be internalized into compartments of increasing acidity. We have studied the pH dependence of the oligomerization state and conformation of the entire extracellular domain and neck region. We present evidence for equilibrium between the monomeric and tetrameric states of the extracellular domain, which exhibits a marked dependence with respect to both pH and ionic strength. Using solution x-ray scattering we have obtained a molecular envelope of the extracellular domain in which a model has been built. Our results highlight the central role of the neck domain in the pH-sensitive control of the oligomerization state, in the extended conformation of the protein, and in carbohydrate recognition domain organization and presentation. This work opens new insight into the molecular mechanism of ligand release and points to new avenues to block the first step of this important infection pathway.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

A key structural role for active site type 3 copper ions in human ceruloplasmin.

Patrice Vachette; Enrico Dainese; Vadim B. Vasyliev; Paolo Di Muro; Mariano Beltramini; Dmitri I. Svergun; Vincenzo De Filippis; Benedetto Salvato

Human ceruloplasmin is a copper containing serum glycoprotein with multiple functions. The crystal structure shows that its six domains are arranged in three pairs with a pseudo-ternary axis. Both the holo and apo forms of human ceruloplasmin were studied by size exclusion chromatography and small angle x-ray scattering in solution. The experimental curve of the holo form displays conspicuous differences with the scattering pattern calculated from the crystal structure. Once the carbohydrate chains and flexible loops not visible in the crystal are accounted for, remaining discrepancies suggest that the central pair of domains may move as a whole with respect to the rest of the molecule. The quasisymmetrical crystal structure therefore appears to be stabilized by crystal packing forces. Upon copper removal, the scattering pattern of human ceruloplasmin exhibits very large differences with that of the holoprotein, which are interpreted in terms of essentially preserved domains freely moving in solution around flexible linkers and exploring an ensemble of open conformations. This model, which is supported by the analysis of domain interfaces, provides a structural explanation for the differences in copper reincorporation into the apoprotein and activity recovery between human ceruloplasmin and two other multicopper oxidases, ascorbate oxidase and laccase. Our results demonstrate that, beyond catalytic activity, the three-copper cluster at the N-terminal-C-terminal interface plays a crucial role in the structural stability of human ceruloplasmin.


Structure | 2008

Crystal structure of an intact type II DNA topoisomerase: insights into DNA transfer mechanisms.

Marc Graille; Lionel Cladière; D. Durand; François Lecointe; Danièle Gadelle; Sophie Quevillon-Cheruel; Patrice Vachette; Patrick Forterre; Herman van Tilbeurgh

DNA topoisomerases resolve DNA topological problems created during transcription, replication, and recombination. These ubiquitous enzymes are essential for cell viability and are highly potent targets for the development of antibacterial and antitumoral drugs. Type II enzymes catalyze the transfer of a DNA duplex through another one in an ATP-dependent mechanism. Because of its small size and sensitivity to antitumoral drugs, the archaeal DNA topoisomerase VI, a type II enzyme, is an excellent model for gaining further understanding of the organization and mechanism of these enzymes. We present the crystal structure of intact DNA topoisomerase VI bound to radicicol, an inhibitor of human topo II, and compare it to the conformation of the apo-protein as determined by small-angle X-ray scattering in solution. This structure, combined with a wealth of experimental data gathered on these enzymes, allows us to propose a structural model for the two-gate DNA transfer mechanism.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2013

Fibrinogen species as resolved by HPLC-SAXS data processing within the UltraScan Solution Modeler (US-SOMO) enhanced SAS module

Emre Brookes; Javier Pérez; Barbara Cardinali; Aldo Profumo; Patrice Vachette; Mattia Rocco

The usefulness of a new high-performance liquid chromatography/small-angle X-ray scattering (HPLC-SAXS) data analysis module within the multi-resolution modeling suite US-SOMO is illustrated with size-exclusion small-angle X-ray scattering (SE-SAXS) data of a crude bovine serum albumin sample. The module is then applied to the SE-SAXS study of a human plasma fibrinogen high-molecular-weight fraction presenting severe aggregation problems and a split non-symmetrical main elution peak probably resulting from in-column degradation.

Collaboration


Dive into the Patrice Vachette's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Durand

University of Paris-Sud

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Javier Pérez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Tauc

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dmitri I. Svergun

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge