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Dive into the research topics where Paule Lachance is active.

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Featured researches published by Paule Lachance.


Journal of Virology | 2005

The Papain-Like Protease from the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Is a Deubiquitinating Enzyme

Holger A. Lindner; Nasser Fotouhi-Ardakani; Viktoria Lytvyn; Paule Lachance; Traian Sulea; Robert Ménard

ABSTRACT The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus papain-like protease (SARS-CoV PLpro) is involved in the processing of the viral polyprotein and, thereby, contributes to the biogenesis of the virus replication complex. Structural bioinformatics has revealed a relationship for the SARS-CoV PLpro to herpesvirus-associated ubiquitin-specific protease (HAUSP), a ubiquitin-specific protease, indicating potential deubiquitinating activity in addition to its function in polyprotein processing (T. Sulea, H. A. Lindner, E. O. Purisima, and R. Menard, J. Virol. 79:4550-4551, 2005). In order to confirm this prediction, we overexpressed and purified SARS-CoV PLpro (amino acids [aa]1507 to 1858) from Escherichia coli. The purified enzyme hydrolyzed ubiquitin-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin (Ub-AMC), a general deubiquitinating enzyme substrate, with a catalytic efficiency of 13,100 M−1s−1, 220-fold more efficiently than the small synthetic peptide substrate Z-LRGG-AMC, which incorporates the C-terminal four residues of ubiquitin. In addition, SARS-CoV PLpro was inhibited by the specific deubiquitinating enzyme inhibitor ubiquitin aldehyde, with an inhibition constant of 210 nM. The purified SARS-CoV PLpro disassembles branched polyubiquitin chains with lengths of two to seven (Ub2-7) or four (Ub4) units, which involves isopeptide bond cleavage. SARS-CoV PLpro processing activity was also detected against a protein fused to the C terminus of the ubiquitin-like modifier ISG15, both in vitro using the purified enzyme and in HeLa cells by coexpression with SARS-CoV PLpro (aa 1198 to 2009). These results clearly establish that SARS-CoV PLpro is a deubiquitinating enzyme, thereby confirming our earlier prediction. This unexpected activity for a coronavirus papain-like protease suggests a novel viral strategy to modulate the host cell ubiquitination machinery to its advantage.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2007

Selectivity in ISG15 and ubiquitin recognition by the SARS coronavirus papain-like protease

Holger A. Lindner; Viktoria Lytvyn; Hongtao Qi; Paule Lachance; Edmund Ziomek; Robert Ménard

Abstract The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus papain-like protease (SARS-CoV PLpro) carries out N-terminal processing of the viral replicase polyprotein, and also exhibits Lys48-linked polyubiquitin chain debranching and ISG15 precursor processing activities in vitro. Here, we used SDS–PAGE and fluorescence-based assays to demonstrate that ISG15 derivatives are the preferred substrates for the deubiquitinating activity of the PLpro. With k cat/K M of 602,000M−1 s−1, PLpro hydrolyzes ISG15-AMC 30- and 60-fold more efficiently than Ub-AMC and Nedd8-AMC, respectively. Data obtained with truncated ISG15 and hybrid Ub/ISG15 substrates indicate that both the N- and C-terminal Ub-like domains of ISG15 contribute to this preference. The enzyme also displays a preference for debranching Lys48- over Lys63-linked polyubiquitin chains. Our results demonstrate that SARS-CoV PLpro can differentiate between ubiquitin-like modifiers sharing a common C-terminal sequence, and that the debranching activity of the PLpro is linkage type selective. The potential structural basis for the demonstrated specificity of SARS-CoV PLpro is discussed.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2014

Small-Molecule Inhibitors of the Pseudaminic Acid Biosynthetic Pathway: Targeting Motility as a Key Bacterial Virulence Factor

Robert Ménard; Ian C. Schoenhofen; Limei Tao; Annie Aubry; Patrice Bouchard; Christopher W. Reid; Paule Lachance; Susan M. Twine; Kelly M. Fulton; Qizhi Cui; Hervé Hogues; Enrico O. Purisima; Traian Sulea; Susan M. Logan

ABSTRACT Helicobacter pylori is motile by means of polar flagella, and this motility has been shown to play a critical role in pathogenicity. The major structural flagellin proteins have been shown to be glycosylated with the nonulosonate sugar, pseudaminic acid (Pse). This glycan is unique to microorganisms, and the process of flagellin glycosylation is required for H. pylori flagellar assembly and consequent motility. As such, the Pse biosynthetic pathway offers considerable potential as an antivirulence drug target, especially since motility is required for H. pylori colonization and persistence in the host. This report describes screening the five Pse biosynthetic enzymes for small-molecule inhibitors using both high-throughput screening (HTS) and in silico (virtual screening [VS]) approaches. Using a 100,000-compound library, 1,773 hits that exhibited a 40% threshold inhibition at a 10 μM concentration were identified by HTS. In addition, VS efforts using a 1.6-million compound library directed at two pathway enzymes identified 80 hits, 4 of which exhibited reasonable inhibition at a 10 μM concentration in vitro. Further secondary screening which identified 320 unique molecular structures or validated hits was performed. Following kinetic studies and structure-activity relationship (SAR) analysis of selected inhibitors from our refined list of 320 compounds, we demonstrated that three inhibitors with 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) of approximately 14 μM, which belonged to a distinct chemical cluster, were able to penetrate the Gram-negative cell membrane and prevent formation of flagella.


Biochemistry | 2011

Contribution of active site residues to substrate hydrolysis by USP2: insights into catalysis by ubiquitin specific proteases.

Wanfang Zhang; Traian Sulea; Limei Tao; Qizhi Cui; Enrico O. Purisima; Ratsavarinh Vongsamphanh; Paule Lachance; Viktoria Lytvyn; Hongtao Qi; Robert Ménard

The ubiquitin-specific protease (USP) structural class represents the largest and most diverse family of deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs). Many USPs assume important biological roles and emerge as potential targets for therapeutic intervention. A clear understanding of USP catalytic mechanism requires a functional evaluation of the proposed key active site residues. Crystallographic data of ubiquitin aldehyde adducts of USP catalytic cores provided structural details on the catalytic triad residues, namely the conserved Cys and His, and a variable putative third residue, and inferred indirect structural roles for two other conserved residues (Asn and Asp), in stabilizing via a bridging water molecule the oxyanion of the tetrahedral intermediate (TI). We have expressed the catalytic domain of USP2 and probed by site-directed mutagenesis the role of these active site residues in the hydrolysis of peptide and isopeptide substrates, including a synthetic K48-linked diubiquitin substrate for which a label-free, mass spectrometry based assay has been developed to monitor cleavage. Hydrolysis of ubiquitin-AMC, a model substrate, was not affected by the mutations. Molecular dynamics simulations of USP2, free and complexed with the TI of a bona fide isopeptide substrate, were carried out. We found that Asn271 is structurally poised to directly stabilize the oxyanion developed in the acylation step, while being structurally supported by the adjacent absolutely conserved Asp575. Mutagenesis data functionally confirmed this structural role independent of the nature (isopeptide vs peptide) of the bond being cleaved. We also found that Asn574, structurally located as the third member of the catalytic triad, does not fulfill this role functionally. A dual supporting role is inferred from double-point mutation and structural data for the absolutely conserved residue Asp575, in oxyanion hole formation, and in maintaining the correct alignment and protonation of His557 for catalytic competency.


Biological Chemistry | 2001

Cathepsins X and B display distinct activity profiles that can be exploited for inhibitor design.

Robert Ménard; Christian Therrien; Paule Lachance; Traian Sulea; Hongtao Qi; Alejandro Alvarez-Hernandez; William R. Roush

Abstract The carboxypeptidase and endopeptidase activities of cathepsins X and B, as well as their inhibition by E 64 derivatives, have been investigated in detail and compared. The results clearly demonstrate that cathepsins X and B do not share similar activity profiles against substrates and inhibitors. Using quenched fluorogenic substrates, we show that cathepsin X preferentially cleaves substrates through a monopeptidyl carboxypeptidase pathway, while cathepsin B displays a preference for the dipeptidyl pathway. The preference for one or the other pathway is about the same for both enzymes, i. e. approximately 2 orders of magnitude. Cleavage of a Cterminal dipeptide of a substrate by cathepsin X can be observed under conditions that preclude efficient monopeptidyl carboxypeptidase activity. In addition, an inhibitor designed to exploit the unique structural features responsible for the carboxypeptidase activity of cathepsin X has been synthesized and tested against cathepsins X, B and L. Although of moderate potency, this E-64 derivative is the first reported example of a cathepsin Xspecific inhibitor. By comparison, CA074 was found to inactivate cathepsin B at least 34000-fold more efficiently than cathepsin X.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1993

Functional expression of human cathepsin S in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Purification and characterization of the recombinant enzyme.

Dieter Brömme; P R Bonneau; Paule Lachance; Bernd Wiederanders; H Kirschke; Christoph Peters; David Y. Thomas; Andrew C. Storer; T Vernet


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1994

Engineering the S2 subsite specificity of human cathepsin S to a cathepsin L- and cathepsin B-like specificity.

Dieter Brömme; P R Bonneau; Paule Lachance; Andrew C. Storer


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2002

Design of noncovalent inhibitors of human cathepsin L. from the 96-residue proregion to optimized tripeptides

Shafinaz F. Chowdhury; J. Sivaraman; Jing Wang; Gopal Devanathan; Paule Lachance; Hongtao Qi; Robert Ménard; Jean Lefebvre; Yasuo Konishi; Miroslaw Cygler; Traian Sulea; Enrico O. Purisima


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 1993

Epoxysuccinyl dipeptides as selective inhibitors of cathepsin B

Barbara J. Gour-Salin; Paule Lachance; Céline Plouffe; Andrew C. Storer; Robert Ménard


Biochemistry | 2001

Cathepsins X and B can be differentiated through their respective mono- and dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase activities.

Christian Therrien; Paule Lachance; Traian Sulea; Enrico O. Purisima; Hongtao Qi; Edmund Ziomek; Alejandro Alvarez-Hernandez; and William R. Roush; Robert Ménard

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Robert Ménard

National Research Council

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Traian Sulea

National Research Council

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Hongtao Qi

National Research Council

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Dieter Brömme

University of British Columbia

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Edmund Ziomek

National Research Council

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Viktoria Lytvyn

National Research Council

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