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Dive into the research topics where Peggy Baudouin-Cornu is active.

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Featured researches published by Peggy Baudouin-Cornu.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Inducible dissociation of SCFMet30 ubiquitin ligase mediates a rapid transcriptional response to cadmium

Régine Barbey; Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Traci A Lee; Astrid Rouillon; Patrick Zarzov; Mike Tyers; Dominique Thomas

Activity of the Met4 transcription factor is antagonized by the SCFMet30 ubiquitin ligase by degradation‐dependent and degradation‐independent mechanisms, in minimal and rich nutrient conditions, respectively. In this study, we show that the heavy metal Cd2+ over‐rides both mechanisms to enable rapid Met4‐dependent induction of metabolic networks needed for production of the antioxidant and Cd2+‐chelating agent glutathione. Cd2+ inhibits SCFMet30 activity through rapid dissociation of the F‐box protein Met30 from the holocomplex. In minimal medium, dissociation of SCFMet30 complex is sufficient to impair the methionine‐induced degradation of Met4. In rich medium, dissociation of the SCFMet30 complex is accompanied by a deubiquitylation mechanism that rapidly removes inhibitory ubiquitin moieties from Met4. Post‐translational control of SCFMet30 assembly by a physiological stress to allow rapid induction of a protective gene expression program represents a novel mode of regulation in the ubiquitin system.


Toxicological Sciences | 2008

Chromate Causes Sulfur Starvation in Yeast

Yannick Pereira; Gilles Lagniel; Emmanuel Godat; Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Christophe Junot; Jean Labarre

Chromate is a widespread pollutant as a waste of human activities. However, the mechanisms underlying its high toxicity are not clearly understood. In this work, we used the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to analyse the physiological effects of chromate exposure in a eukaryote cell model. We show that chromate causes a strong decrease of sulfate assimilation and sulfur metabolite pools suggesting that cells experience sulfur starvation. As a consequence, nearly all enzymes of the sulfur pathway are highly induced as well as enzymes of the sulfur-sparing response such as Pdc6, the sulfur-poor pyruvate decarboxylase. The induction of Pdc6 was regulated at the mRNA level and dependent upon Met32, a coactivator of Met4, the transcriptional activator of the sulfur pathway. Finally, we found that chromate enters the cells mainly through sulfate transporters and competitively inhibits sulfate uptake. Also consistent with a competition between the two substrates, sulfate supplementation relieves chromate toxicity. However, the data suggest that the chromate-mediated sulfur depletion is not simply due to this competitive uptake but would also be the consequence of competitive metabolism between the two compounds presumably at another step of the sulfur assimilation pathway.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Determinants of the ubiquitin-mediated degradation of the Met4 transcription factor.

Alexandra Menant; Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Caroline Peyraud; Mike Tyers; Dominique Thomas

In yeast, the Met4 transcription factor and its cofactors Cbf1, Met28, Met31, and Met32 control the expression of sulfur metabolism and oxidative stress response genes. Met4 activity is tuned to nutrient and oxidative stress conditions by the SCFMet30 ubiquitin ligase. The mechanism whereby SCFMet30-dependent ubiquitylation of Met4 controls Met4 activity remains contentious. Here, we have demonstrated that intracellular cysteine levels dictate the degradation of Met4 in vivo, as shown by the ability of cysteine, but not methionine or S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet), to trigger Met4 degradation in an str4Δ strain, which lacks the ability to produce cysteine from methionine or AdoMet. Met4 degradation requires its nuclear localization and activity of the 26 S proteasome. Analysis of the regulated degradation of a fully functional Met4-Cbf1 chimera, in which Met4 is fused to the DNA binding domain of Cbf1, demonstrates that elimination of Met4 in vivo can be triggered independently of both its normal protein interactions. Strains that harbor the Met4-Cbf1 fusion as the only source of Cbf1 activity needed for proper kinetochore function exhibit high rates of methionine-dependent chromosomal instability. We suggest that SCFMet30 activity or Met4 utilization as a substrate may be directly regulated by intracellular cysteine concentrations.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2006

Variation among species in proteomic sulphur content is related to environmental conditions

Jason G. Bragg; Dominique Thomas; Peggy Baudouin-Cornu

The elemental composition of proteins influences the quantities of different elements required by organisms. Here, we considered variation in the sulphur content of whole proteomes among 19 Archaea, 122 Eubacteria and 10 eukaryotes whose genomes have been fully sequenced. We found that different species vary greatly in the sulphur content of their proteins, and that average sulphur content of proteomes and genome base composition are related. Forces contributing to variation in proteomic sulphur content appear to operate quite uniformly across the proteins of different species. In particular, the sulphur content of orthologous proteins was frequently correlated with mean proteomic sulphur contents. Among prokaryotes, proteomic sulphur content tended to be greater in anaerobes, relative to non-anaerobes. Thermophiles tended to have lower proteomic sulphur content than non-thermophiles, consistent with the thermolability of cysteine and methionine residues. This work suggests that persistent environmental growth conditions can influence the evolution of elemental composition of whole proteomes in a manner that may have important implications for the amount of sulphur used by living organisms to build proteins. It extends previous studies that demonstrated links between transient changes in environmental conditions and the elemental composition of subsets of proteins expressed under these conditions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Intimate Evolution of Proteins PROTEOME ATOMIC CONTENT CORRELATES WITH GENOME BASE COMPOSITION

Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Katja Schuerer; Philippe Marliere; Dominique Thomas

Discerning the significant relations that exist within and among genome sequences is a major step toward the modeling of biopolymer evolution. Here we report the systematic analysis of the atomic composition of proteins encoded by organisms representative of each kingdoms. Protein atomic contents are shown to vary largely among species, the larger variations being observed for the main architectural component of proteins, the carbon atom. These variations apply to the bulk proteins as well as to subsets of ortholog proteins. A pronounced correlation between proteome carbon content and genome base composition is further evidenced, with high G+C genome content being related to low protein carbon content. The generation of random proteomes and the examination of the canonical genetic code provide arguments for the hypothesis that natural selection might have driven genome base composition.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2014

Glutathione is essential to preserve nuclear function and cell survival under oxidative stress.

Elie Hatem; Véronique Berthonaud; Michèle Dardalhon; Gilles Lagniel; Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Meng-Er Huang; Jean Labarre; Stéphane Chédin

Organisms growing in aerobic environments must cope with Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS). Although ROS damage all the cellular macromolecules, they play a central role in a range of biological processes requiring a tight control of redox homeostasis. It is achieved by antioxidant systems involving a large collection of enzymes that scavenge or degrade the ROS produced endogenously during cell growth. In addition to this enzymatic protection against ROS, cells also contain small antioxidant molecules, such as glutathione (GSH). With an intracellular concentration between 1 and 10mM, GSH is the most abundant non-protein thiol in the cell and is considered as the major redox buffer of the cell. To better characterize its essential function during oxidative stress conditions, we studied the physiological response of H2O2-treated yeast cells containing different amounts of GSH. We showed that the transcriptional response of GSH-depleted cells is severely impaired, despite an efficient nuclear accumulation of the transcription factor Yap1. Moreover, oxidative stress generates high genome instability in GSH-depleted cells, but does not activate the checkpoint kinase Rad53. Surprisingly, scarce amounts of intracellular GSH are sufficient to preserve cell viability under H2O2 treatment. In these cells, oxidative stress still causes the accumulation of oxidized proteins and the inactivation of the translational activity, but nuclear DNA and nuclear functions are protected against oxidative injury, as exemplified by low mutation frequency, moderate histone carbonylation, activation of the checkpoint kinase Rad53 and of the H2O2 transcriptional response. We conclude that the essential role of GSH is to preserve nuclear function, allowing cell survival and growth resumption after oxidative stress release. We propose that cytosolic proteins are part of a protective machinery that shields the nucleus by scavenging reactive oxygen species before they can cross the nuclear membrane.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Glutathione Degradation Is a Key Determinant of Glutathione Homeostasis

Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Gilles Lagniel; Chitranshu Kumar; Meng-Er Huang; Jean Labarre

Background: Intracellular concentration of glutathione, an essential sulfur compound, is tightly controlled. Results: In yeast, glutathione degradation is faster than previously published, and glutathione intracellular concentration does not affect its synthesis. Conclusion: Glutathione degradation is a key determinant of glutathione homeostasis. Significance: This work challenges notions on glutathione synthesis and degradation, which were considered as established. Glutathione (GSH) has several important functions in eukaryotic cells, and its intracellular concentration is tightly controlled. Combining mathematical models and 35S labeling, we analyzed Saccharomyces cerevisiae sulfur metabolism. This led us to the observation that GSH recycling is markedly faster than previously estimated. We set up additional in vivo assays and concluded that under standard conditions, GSH half-life is around 90 min. Sulfur starvation and growth with GSH as the sole sulfur source strongly increase GSH degradation, whereas cadmium (Cd2+) treatment inhibits GSH degradation. Whatever the condition tested, GSH is degraded by the cytosolic Dug complex (composed of the three subunits Dug1, Dug2, and Dug3) but not by the γ-glutamyl-transpeptidase, raising the question of the role of this enzyme. In vivo, both DUG2/3 mRNA levels and Dug activity are quickly induced by sulfur deprivation in a Met4-dependent manner. This suggests that Dug activity is mainly regulated at the transcriptional level. Finally, analysis of dug2Δ and dug3Δ mutant cells shows that GSH degradation activity strongly impacts on GSH intracellular concentration and that GSH intracellular concentration does not affect GSH synthesis rate. Altogether, our data led us to reconsider important aspects of GSH metabolism, challenging notions on GSH synthesis and GSH degradation that were considered as established.


Nature | 2007

Evolutionary biology: Oxygen at life's boundaries

Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Dominique Thomas

Proteins are made of amino acids. But amino acids are made of atoms. Exploration of this self-evident principle opens up fresh perspectives on the evolution of biological membranes and multicellular life.


Proteomics | 2009

Development of a new method for absolute protein quantification on 2-D gels

Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Gilles Lagniel; Stéphane Chédin; Jean Labarre

With the development of systems biology projects aimed at modeling the cell, accurate and absolute measurements of cellular protein concentrations are increasingly important. However, methods for absolute quantification at the proteomic level remain rare. Using the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we propose a new method based on the radioactive labeling with an 35S compound and 2‐D PAGE. The principle is simple: cells are grown for more than four generations in the presence of a unique sulfur source labeled at a defined specific radioactivity, ensuring that more than 90% of the proteins are labeled at the same specific radioactivity as the sulfur source. After separation of 35S‐labeled proteins on 2‐D gels, each protein is counted. The amount of each protein present in the gel is then calculated, from which is deduced the amount of each protein per cell. The method, limited to soluble and abundant proteins visible on 2‐D gels, is simple, precise and reproducible and does not require an internal standard. We use it to compare the amounts of proteins in two growth conditions: 100 μM sulfate or 500 μM methionine. Up to now, we only had transcriptional data on the expression of these proteins in both conditions.


Science | 2001

Molecular Evolution of Protein Atomic Composition

Peggy Baudouin-Cornu; Yolande Surdin-Kerjan; Philippe Marliere; Dominique Thomas

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Dominique Thomas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean Labarre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Elie Hatem

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Gilles Lagniel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Katja Schuerer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Meng-Er Huang

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alexandra Menant

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Astrid Rouillon

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Caroline Peyraud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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