Patrick Duwat
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Featured researches published by Patrick Duwat.
Molecular Microbiology | 1999
Patrick Duwat; S. Dusko Ehrlich; Alexandra Gruss
Studies of cellular responses to stress conditions such as heat, oxygen or starvation have revealed the existence of numerous specific or interactive response pathways. We previously observed in Lactococcus lactis that inactivation of the recA gene renders the lactococcal strain sensitive not only to DNA‐damaging agents but also to oxygen and heat. To further examine the stress response pathways in L. lactis, we isolatedthermoresistant insertionalmutants (Trm) of the recA strain. Eighteen independent trm mutations were identified and characterized. We found that mutations map in only seven genes, implicated in purine metabolism (deoB, guaA and tktA), phosphate uptake (pstB and pstS), mRNA stability (pnpA) and in one uncharacterized gene (trmA). All the trm mutations, with the exception of trmA, confer multiple stress resistance to the cell. Some of the mutations confer improved heat stress resistance not only in the recA but also in the wild‐type context. Our results reveal that cellular metabolic pathways are intimately related to stress response and that the flux of particular metabolites, notably guanine and phosphate, may be implicated in stress response in lactococci.
International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2000
Patrick Duwat; Bénédicte Cesselin; Sophie Sourice; Alexandra Gruss
The dairy organism, Lactococcus lactis, is continuously exposed to stress conditions generated during industrial processes. To identify the mechanisms that confer resistance to the lethal effects of oxygen and thermal stress, we isolated resistant strains by insertional mutagenesis. Mutated genes were identified and mutations were shown to confer resistance to multiple stresses (including non-selected stresses such as carbon starvation). Our results revealed that metabolic flux plays an important role in L. lactis stress response, and suggested that phosphate and guanine pools may be intracellular stress sensors. As previously shown, we also observed an increase of stress resistance during the stationary phase. We have evidence that stationary phase actually initiates very early during growth. Taken together, these data show that the stationary phase is a very complex system with multiple participants interacting altogether. These results reinforce the idea of the interdependence of stress response and the intimate relation between metabolic flux and stress responses in L. lactis.
Microbiology | 2009
Bénédicte Cesselin; Djae Ali; Jean-Jacques Gratadoux; Philippe Gaudu; Patrick Duwat; Alexandra Gruss; Meriem El Karoui
Numerous strategies allowing bacteria to detect and respond to oxidative conditions depend on the cell redox state. Here we examined the ability of Lactococcus lactis to survive aerobically in the presence of the reducing agent dithiothreitol (DTT), which would be expected to modify the cell redox state and disable the oxidative stress response. DTT inhibited L. lactis growth at 37 degrees C in aerobic conditions, but not in anaerobiosis. Mutants selected as DTT resistant all mapped to the pstFEDCBA locus, encoding a high-affinity phosphate transporter. Transcription of pstFEDCBA and a downstream putative regulator of stress response, phoU, was deregulated in a pstA strain, but amounts of major oxidative stress proteins were unchanged. As metals participate in oxygen radical formation, we compared metal sensitivity of wild-type and pstA strains. The pstA mutant showed approximately 100-fold increased resistance to copper and zinc. Furthermore, copper or zinc addition exacerbated the sensitivity of a wild-type L. lactis strain to DTT. Inactivation of pstA conferred a more general resistance to oxidative stress, alleviating the oxygen- and thermo-sensitivity of a clpP mutant. This study establishes a role for the pst locus in metal homeostasis, suggesting that pst inactivation lowers intracellular reactivity of copper and zinc, which would limit bacterial sensitivity to oxygen.
Journal of Bacteriology | 1992
Emmanuelle Maguin; Patrick Duwat; T Hege; Dusko S. Ehrlich; Alexandra Gruss
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2002
Philippe Gaudu; Karin Vido; Bénédicte Cesselin; Saulius Kulakauskas; Josselyne Tremblay; Lahcen Rezaïki; Gilles Lamberet; Sophie Sourice; Patrick Duwat; Alexandra Gruss
Journal of Bacteriology | 1997
Patrick Duwat; A Cochu; S D Ehrlich; Alexandra Gruss
Microbiology | 2005
Tatiana Rochat; Anderson Miyoshi; Jean-Jacques Gratadoux; Patrick Duwat; S. Sourice; Vasco Azevedo; Philippe Langella
Journal of Bacteriology | 1992
Patrick Duwat; S D Ehrlich; Alexandra Gruss
Archive | 1999
Patrick Duwat; Anne Bravard; Sophie Sourice; Alexandra Gruss
Archive | 2000
Anne Bravard; Patrick Duwat