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Dive into the research topics where Pierre Falson is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierre Falson.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Structures of P-glycoprotein reveal its conformational flexibility and an epitope on the nucleotide-binding domain.

Andrew B. Ward; Paul Szewczyk; Vinciane Grimard; Chang-Wook Lee; Lorena Martinez; Rupak Doshi; Alexandra Caya; Mark Villaluz; Els Pardon; Cristina Cregger; Douglas J. Swartz; Pierre Falson; Ina L. Urbatsch; Cédric Govaerts; Jan Steyaert; Geoffrey Chang

P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is one of the best-known mediators of drug efflux-based multidrug resistance in many cancers. This validated therapeutic target is a prototypic, plasma membrane resident ATP-Binding Cassette transporter that pumps xenobiotic compounds out of cells. The large, polyspecific drug-binding pocket of P-gp recognizes a variety of structurally unrelated compounds. The transport of these drugs across the membrane is coincident with changes in the size and shape of this pocket during the course of the transport cycle. Here, we present the crystal structures of three inward-facing conformations of mouse P-gp derived from two different crystal forms. One structure has a nanobody bound to the C-terminal side of the first nucleotide-binding domain. This nanobody strongly inhibits the ATP hydrolysis activity of mouse P-gp by hindering the formation of a dimeric complex between the ATP-binding domains, which is essential for nucleotide hydrolysis. Together, these inward-facing conformational snapshots of P-gp demonstrate a range of flexibility exhibited by this transporter, which is likely an essential feature for the binding and transport of large, diverse substrates. The nanobody-bound structure also reveals a unique epitope on P-gp.


Oncogene | 2000

Hepatitis B virus-related insertional mutagenesis implicates SERCA1 gene in the control of apoptosis

Mounia Chami; Devrim Gozuacik; Kenichi Saigo; Thierry Capiod; Pierre Falson; Hervé Lecoeur; Tetsuro Urashima; Jack Beckmann; Marie-Lyse Gougeon; Michel Claret; Marc le Maire; Christian Bréchot; Patrizia Paterlini-Bréchot

We have used the Hepatitis B Virus DNA genome as a probe to identify genes clonally mutated in vivo, in human liver cancers. In a tumor, HBV-DNA was found to be integrated into the gene encoding Sarco/Endoplasmic Reticulum Calcium ATPase (SERCA), which pumps calcium, an important intracellular messenger for cell viability and growth, from the cytosol to the endoplasmic reticulum. The HBV X gene promoter cis-activates chimeric HBV X/SERCA1 transcripts, with splicing of SERCA1 exon 11, encoding C-terminally truncated SERCA1 proteins. Two chimeric HBV X/SERCA1 proteins accumulate in the tumor and form dimers. In vitro analyses have demonstrated that these proteins localize to the ER, determine its calcium depletion and induce cell death. We have also shown that these biological effects are related to expression of the SERCA, rather than of the viral moiety. This report involves for the first time the expression of mutated SERCA proteins in vivo in a tumor cell proliferation and in vitro in the control of cell viability.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

ABCG2 Transports and Transfers Heme to Albumin through Its Large Extracellular Loop

Elodie Desuzinges-Mandon; Ophélie Arnaud; Lorena Martinez; Frédéric Huché; Attilio Di Pietro; Pierre Falson

ABCG2 is an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter preferentially expressed by immature human hematopoietic progenitors. Due to its role in drug resistance, its expression has been correlated with a protection role against protoporhyrin IX (PPIX) accumulation in stem cells under hypoxic conditions. We show here that zinc mesoporphyrin, a validated fluorescent heme analog, is transported by ABCG2. We also show that the ABCG2 large extracellular loop ECL3 constitutes a porphyrin-binding domain, which strongly interacts with heme, hemin, PPIX, ZnPPIX, CoPPIX, and much less efficiently with pheophorbide a, but not with vitamin B12. Kd values are in the range 0.5–3.5 μm, with heme displaying the highest affinity. Nonporphyrin substrates of ABCG2, such as mitoxantrone, doxo/daunorubicin, and riboflavin, do not bind to ECL3. Single-point mutations H583A and C603A inside ECL3 prevent the binding of hemin but hardly affect that of iron-free PPIX. The extracellular location of ECL3 downstream from the transport sites suggests that, after membrane translocation, hemin is transferred to ECL3, which is strategically positioned to release the bound porphyrin to extracellular partners. We show here that human serum albumin could be one of these possible partners as it removes hemin bound to ECL3 and interacts with ABCG2, with a Kd of about 3 μm.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Structuring detergents for extracting and stabilizing functional membrane proteins.

Rima Matar-Merheb; Moez Rhimi; Antoine Leydier; Frédéric Huché; Carmen Galián; Elodie Desuzinges-Mandon; Damien Ficheux; David Flot; Nushin Aghajari; Richard Kahn; Attilio Di Pietro; Jean-Michel Jault; Anthony W. Coleman; Pierre Falson

Background Membrane proteins are privileged pharmaceutical targets for which the development of structure-based drug design is challenging. One underlying reason is the fact that detergents do not stabilize membrane domains as efficiently as natural lipids in membranes, often leading to a partial to complete loss of activity/stability during protein extraction and purification and preventing crystallization in an active conformation. Methodology/Principal Findings Anionic calix[4]arene based detergents (C4Cn, n = 1–12) were designed to structure the membrane domains through hydrophobic interactions and a network of salt bridges with the basic residues found at the cytosol-membrane interface of membrane proteins. These compounds behave as surfactants, forming micelles of 5–24 nm, with the critical micellar concentration (CMC) being as expected sensitive to pH ranging from 0.05 to 1.5 mM. Both by 1H NMR titration and Surface Tension titration experiments, the interaction of these molecules with the basic amino acids was confirmed. They extract membrane proteins from different origins behaving as mild detergents, leading to partial extraction in some cases. They also retain protein functionality, as shown for BmrA (Bacillus multidrug resistance ATP protein), a membrane multidrug-transporting ATPase, which is particularly sensitive to detergent extraction. These new detergents allow BmrA to bind daunorubicin with a Kd of 12 µM, a value similar to that observed after purification using dodecyl maltoside (DDM). They preserve the ATPase activity of BmrA (which resets the protein to its initial state after drug efflux) much more efficiently than SDS (sodium dodecyl sulphate), FC12 (Foscholine 12) or DDM. They also maintain in a functional state the C4Cn-extracted protein upon detergent exchange with FC12. Finally, they promote 3D-crystallization of the membrane protein. Conclusion/Significance These compounds seem promising to extract in a functional state membrane proteins obeying the positive inside rule. In that context, they may contribute to the membrane protein crystallization field.


FEBS Letters | 1994

Expression of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase in yeast

Francisco Centeno; Stéphane Deschamps; Anne-Marie Lompré; Marielle Anger; Marie-Jo Moutin; Yves Dupont; Michael G. Palmgren; José M. Villalba; Jesper Møller; Pierre Falson; Marc le Maire

We describe here an easy system for the production of mg amounts of the rabbit Ca2+‐ATPase SERCA 1a in the yeast S. cerevisiae. The protein is present in several membranes, including the plasma membrane of the yeast, in a native conformation. It can be purified by immunoprecipitation and can be phosphorylated from ATP in a Ca2+‐dependent manner. Using a temperature‐sensitive secretion mutant strain, the fully active protein can also be obtained in secretory vesicles.


FEBS Journal | 2014

Understanding polyspecificity within the substrate‐binding cavity of the human multidrug resistance P‐glycoprotein

Lorena Martinez; Ophélie Arnaud; Emilie Henin; Houchao Tao; Vincent Chaptal; Rupak Doshi; Thibault Andrieu; Sébastien Dussurgey; Michel Tod; Attilio Di Pietro; Qinghai Zhang; Geoffrey Chang; Pierre Falson

Human P‐glycoprotein (P‐gp) controls drugs bioavailability by pumping structurally unrelated drugs out of cells. The X‐ray structure of the mouse P‐gp ortholog has been solved, with two SSS enantiomers or one RRR enantiomer of the selenohexapeptide inhibitor QZ59, found within the putative drug‐binding pocket (Aller SG, Yu J, Ward A, Weng Y, Chittaboina S, Zhuo R, Harrell PM, Trinh YT, Zhang Q, Urbatsch IL et al. (2009). Science 323, 1718–1722). This offered the first opportunity to localize the well‐known H and R drug‐binding sites with respect to the QZ59 inhibition mechanisms of Hoechst 33342 and daunorubicin transports, characterized here in cellulo. We found that QZ59‐SSS competes efficiently with both substrates, with KI,app values of 0.15 and 0.3 μm, which are 13 and 2 times lower, respectively, than the corresponding Km,app values. In contrast, QZ59‐RRR non‐competitively inhibited daunorubicin transport with moderate efficacy (KI,app = 1.9 μm); it also displayed a mixed‐type inhibition of the Hoechst 33342 transport, resulting from a main non‐competitive tendency (Ki2,app = 1.6 μm) and a limited competitive tendency (Ki1,app = 5 μm). These results suggest a positional overlap of QZ59 and drugs binding sites: full for the SSS enantiomer and partial for the RRR enantiomer. Crystal structure analysis suggests that the H site overlaps both QZ59‐SSS locations while the R site overlaps the most embedded location.


European Journal of Cancer | 2011

The acridone derivative MBLI-87 sensitizes breast cancer resistance protein-expressing xenografts to irinotecan

Ophélie Arnaud; Ahcène Boumendjel; Annabelle Geze; Mylène Honorat; E.L. Matera; Jérôme Guitton; W.D. Stein; Susan E. Bates; Pierre Falson; Charles Dumontet; A. Di Pietro; Léa Payen

The breast cancer resistance protein ABCG2 confers cellular resistance to irinotecan (CPT-11) and its active metabolite SN-38. We utilised ABCG2-expressing xenografts as a model to evaluate the ability of a non-toxic ABCG2 inhibitor to increase intracellular drug accumulation. We assessed the activity of irinotecan in vivo in SCID mice: irinotecan completely inhibited the development of control pcDNA3.1 xenografts, whilst only delaying the growth of ABCG2-expressing xenografts. Addition of MBLI-87, an acridone derivative inhibitor, significantly increased the irinotecan effect against the growth of ABCG2-expressing xenografts. In vitro, MBLI-87 was as potent as GF120918 against ABCG2-mediated irinotecan efflux, and additionally was specific for ABCG2. A significant sensitisation to irinotecan was achieved despite the fact that doses remained well below the maximum tolerated dose (due to the rather limited solubility of MBLI-87). This suggested that MBLI-87 is an excellent candidate to prevent drug efflux by ABCG2, without altering plasma concentrations of irinotecan and SN-38 after IP (intra-peritoneal) injections. This could constitute a useful strategy to improve drug pharmacology, to facilitate drug penetration into normal tissue compartments protected by ABCG2, and potentially to reverse drug resistance in cancer cells.


Journal of Virology | 2015

Hepatitis C Virus Envelope Glycoprotein E1 Forms Trimers at the Surface of the Virion

Pierre Falson; Birke Bartosch; Khaled Alsaleh; Birke Andrea Tews; Antoine Loquet; Yann Ciczora; Laura Riva; Cédric Montigny; Claire Montpellier; Gilles Duverlie; Eve-Isabelle Pécheur; Marc le Maire; François-Loïc Cosset; Jean Dubuisson; François Penin

ABSTRACT In hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected cells, the envelope glycoproteins E1 and E2 assemble as a heterodimer. To investigate potential changes in the oligomerization of virion-associated envelope proteins, we performed SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions but without thermal denaturation. This revealed the presence of SDS-resistant trimers of E1 in the context of cell-cultured HCV (HCVcc) as well as in the context of HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpp). The formation of E1 trimers was found to depend on the coexpression of E2. To further understand the origin of E1 trimer formation, we coexpressed in bacteria the transmembrane (TM) domains of E1 (TME1) and E2 (TME2) fused to reporter proteins and analyzed the fusion proteins by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting. As expected for strongly interacting TM domains, TME1–TME2 heterodimers resistant to SDS were observed. These analyses also revealed homodimers and homotrimers of TME1, indicating that such complexes are stable species. The N-terminal segment of TME1 exhibits a highly conserved GxxxG sequence, a motif that is well documented to be involved in intramembrane protein-protein interactions. Single or double mutations of the glycine residues (Gly354 and Gly358) in this motif markedly decreased or abrogated the formation of TME1 homotrimers in bacteria, as well as homotrimers of E1 in both HCVpp and HCVcc systems. A concomitant loss of infectivity was observed, indicating that the trimeric form of E1 is essential for virus infectivity. Taken together, these results indicate that E1E2 heterodimers form trimers on HCV particles, and they support the hypothesis that E1 could be a fusion protein. IMPORTANCE HCV glycoproteins E1 and E2 play an essential role in virus entry into liver cells as well as in virion morphogenesis. In infected cells, these two proteins form a complex in which E2 interacts with cellular receptors, whereas the function of E1 remains poorly understood. However, recent structural data suggest that E1 could be the protein responsible for the process of fusion between viral and cellular membranes. Here we investigated the oligomeric state of HCV envelope glycoproteins. We demonstrate that E1 forms functional trimers after virion assembly and that in addition to the requirement for E2, a determinant for this oligomerization is present in a conserved GxxxG motif located within the E1 transmembrane domain. Taken together, these results indicate that a rearrangement of E1E2 heterodimer complexes likely occurs during the assembly of HCV particles to yield a trimeric form of the E1E2 heterodimer. Gaining structural information on this trimer will be helpful for the design of an anti-HCV vaccine.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

The multidrug resistance half-transporter ABCG2 is purified as a tetramer upon selective extraction from membranes☆

Manuela Dezi; Pierre-Fréderic Fribourg; Aurelie Di Cicco; Ophélie Arnaud; Sergio Marco; Pierre Falson; Attilio Di Pietro; Daniel Lévy

ABCG2 is a human membrane ATP-binding cassette half-transporter that hydrolyzes ATP to efflux a large number of chemotherapeutic agents. Several oligomeric states of ABCG2 from homodimers to dodecamers have been reported depending on the overexpression systems and/or the protocols used for purification. Here, we compared the oligomeric state of His(6)-ABCG2 expressed in Sf9 insect cells and in human Flp-In-293/ABCG2 cells after solubilization in mild detergents. His(6)-ABCG2 was purified through a new approach involving its specific recognition onto a functionalized lipid layer containing a Ni-NTA lipid. This approach allowed the purification of His-ABCG2 in presence of all solubilized membrane components that might be involved in the stabilisation of native oligomers and without requiring any additional washing or concentration passages. ABCG2 purified onto the NiNTA lipid surfaces were directly analyzed by electron microscopy and by biochemical assays. Altogether, our data are consistent with a tetrameric organization of ABCG2 when expressed in either heterologous Sf9 insect cells or in human homologous cells.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Potent and Fully Noncompetitive Peptidomimetic Inhibitor of Multidrug Resistance P-Glycoprotein

Ophélie Arnaud; Ali Koubeissi; Laurent Ettouati; Raphaël Terreux; Ghina Alamé; Catherine Grenot; Charles Dumontet; Attilio Di Pietro; Joëlle Paris; Pierre Falson

N(α)-Boc-l-Asp(OBn)-l-Lys(Z)-OtBu (reversin 121, 1), an inhibitor of the P-gp ABC transporter, was used to conceive compounds inhibiting the drug efflux occurring through the Hoechst 33342 and daunorubicin transport sites of P-gp, respectively H and R sites. Replacement of the aspartyl residue by trans-4-hydroxy-l-proline (4(R)Hyp) gave compounds 11 and 15 characterized by half-maximal inhibitory concentrations (IC(50)) of 0.6 and 0.2 μM, which are 2- and 7-fold lower than that of the parent molecule. The difference in IC(50) between 11 and 15 rests on the carbonyl group of the peptidyl bond, reduced in 15. Those compounds are rather specific of P-gp, having no or limited activity on MRP1 and BCRP. 15 displayed no marked cytotoxicity up to 10-fold its IC(50). Importantly, 15 equally inhibited the Hoechst 33342 and daunorubicin effluxes through a typical noncompetitive inhibition mechanism, suggesting its binding to a site different from the H and R drug-transport sites.

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Rajendra Prasad

Amity Institute of Biotechnology

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Alexis Moreno

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Ophélie Arnaud

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guillaume Lenoir

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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