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Dive into the research topics where Stéphane P. Vincent is active.

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Featured researches published by Stéphane P. Vincent.


Chemical Communications | 2010

Fullerene sugar balls

Jean-François Nierengarten; Julien Iehl; Vincent Oerthel; Michel Holler; Beatriz M. Illescas; Antonio Muñoz; Nazario Martín; Javier Rojo; Macarena Sánchez-Navarro; Samy Cecioni; Sébastien Vidal; Kevin Buffet; Maxime Durka; Stéphane P. Vincent

Fullerene hexakis-adducts bearing 12 peripheral carbohydrate moieties have been prepared by grafting sugar derivatives onto the fullerene core through the copper mediated Huisgen 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of azides and alkynes.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2000

Chemo-enzymatic synthesis of fluorinated sugar nucleotide: useful mechanistic probes for glycosyltransferases.

Michael D. Burkart; Stéphane P. Vincent; Arno Düffels; Brion W. Murray; Steven V. Ley; Chi-Huey Wong

An effective procedure for the synthesis of 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-sugar nucleotides via Select fluor-mediated electrophilic fluorination of glycals with concurrent nucleophilic addition or chemo-enzymatic transformation has been developed, and the fluorinated sugar nucleotides have been used as probes for glycosyltransferases, including fucosyltransferase III, V, VI, and VII, and sialyl transferases. In general, these fluorinated sugar nucleotides act as competitive inhibitors versus sugar nucleotide substrates and form a tight complex with the glycosyltransferase.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

Aromatic–Carbohydrate Interactions: An NMR and Computational Study of Model Systems

Sophie Vandenbussche; Dolores Díaz; María del Carmen Fernández-Alonso; Weidong Pan; Stéphane P. Vincent; Gabriel Cuevas; Francisco Javier Cañada; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Kristin Bartik

The interactions of simple carbohydrates with aromatic moieties have been investigated experimentally by NMR spectroscopy. The analysis of the changes in the chemical shifts of the sugar proton signals induced upon addition of aromatic entities has been interpreted in terms of interaction geometries. Phenol and aromatic amino acids (phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan) have been used. The observed sugar-aromatic interactions depend on the chemical nature of the sugar, and thus on the stereochemistries of the different carbon atoms, and also on the solvent. A preliminary study of the solvation state of a model monosaccharide (methyl beta-galactopyranoside) in aqueous solution, both alone and in the presence of benzene and phenol, has also been carried out by monitoring of intermolecular homonuclear solvent-sugar and aromatic-sugar NOEs. These experimental results have been compared with those obtained by density functional theory methods and molecular mechanics calculations.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis and evaluation of β-carboline derivatives as potential monoamine oxidase inhibitors

Jérémy Reniers; S. Robert; Raphaël Frédérick; Bernard Masereel; Stéphane P. Vincent; Johan Wouters

Previous studies have shown that harmine is a reversible inhibitor of human monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A). Moreover, the crystal structure of human MAO-A in complex with harmine has been recently solved. This crystal structure shows that close to the methoxy group of the harmine moiety, a lipophilic pocket is left vacant within the binding site of human MAO-A. Our objective was to optimize the β-carboline series against human MAO-A in order to explore this pocket. Therefore, a series of β-carboline derivatives has been synthesized. The compounds were evaluated for their human monoamine oxidase A and B inhibitory potency and their K(i) values were estimated. The results show that O-alkylated compounds with lipophilic groups like cyclohexyl, phenyl and aliphatic chains increase the inhibition of MAO-A compared to harmine. Compound 3e, with the trifluorobutyloxy group, was the most active of this series, with a K(i) against MAO-A of 3.6nM. Molecular docking studies show that the trifluorobutyloxy chain occupies the hydrophobic pocket vacant with harmine. The O-alkylated compounds are less active on MAO-B than on MAO-A. However, several compounds show a better inhibition on MAO-B compared to harmine. Compound 3f, with the cyclohexylmethoxy chain, displayed the best inhibitory activity against MAO-B with a K(i) value of 221.6nM. This cyclohexyl bearing analogue is also a potent MAO-A inhibitor with a K(i) value of 4.3nM. Molecular docking studies show that the cyclohexyl chain also occupies a hydrophobic pocket but in different ways in MAO-A or MAO-B.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Biologically Active Heteroglycoclusters Constructed on a Pillar[5]arene‐Containing [2]Rotaxane Scaffold

Stéphane P. Vincent; Kevin Buffet; Iwona Nierengarten; Anne Imberty; Jean-François Nierengarten

Abstract A synthetic approach combining recent concepts for the preparation of multifunctional nanomolecules (click chemistry on multifunctional scaffolds) with supramolecular chemistry (self‐assembly to prepare rotaxanes) gave easy access to a large variety of sophisticated [2]rotaxane heteroglycoclusters. Specifically, compounds combining galactose and fucose have been prepared to target the two bacterial lectins (LecA and LecB) from the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

Systematic synthesis of inhibitors of the two first enzymes of the bacterial heptose biosynthetic pathway: towards antivirulence molecules targeting lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis.

Maxime Durka; Abdellatif Tikad; Régis Périon; Michael Bosco; Mounir Andaloussi; Stéphanie Floquet; Elodie Malacain; François Moreau; Mayalen Oxoby; Vincent Gerusz; Stéphane P. Vincent

L-Heptoses (L-glycero-D-manno-heptopyranoses) are constituents of the inner core of lipolysaccharide (LPS), a molecule playing key roles in the mortality of many infectious diseases as well as in the virulence of many human pathogens. The inhibition of the first enzymes of the bacterial heptose biosynthetic pathway is an almost unexplored field to date although it appears to be a very novel way for the development of antivirulence drugs. We report the synthesis of a series of D-glycero-D-manno-heptopyranose 7-phosphate (H7P) analogues and their inhibition properties against the isomerase GmhA and the the kinase HldE, the two first enzymes of the bacterial heptose biosynthetic pathway. The heptose structures have been modified at the 1-, 2-, 6- and 7-positions to probe the importance of the key structural features of H7P that allow a tight binding to the target enzymes; H7P being the product of GmhA and the substrate of HldE, the second objective was to find structures that could simultaneously inhibit both enzymes. We found that GmhA and HldE were extremely sensitive to structural modifications at the 6- and 7- positions of the heptose scaffold. To our surprise, the epimeric analogue of H7P displaying a D-glucopyranose configuration was found to be the best inhibitor of both enzymes but also the only molecule of this series that could inhibit GmhA (IC(50)=34 μM) and HldE (IC(50)=9.4 μM) in the low micromolar range. Noteworthy, this study describes the first inhibitors of GmhA ever reported, and paves the way to the design of a second generation of molecules targeting the bacterial virulence.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Structural basis of ligand binding to UDP-galactopyranose mutase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis using substrate and tetrafluorinated substrate analogues.

Karin E. van Straaten; Jijin R. A. Kuttiyatveetil; Charlotte M. Sevrain; Sydney A. Villaume; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Bruno Linclau; Stéphane P. Vincent; David A. R. Sanders

UDP-Galactopyranose mutase (UGM) is a flavin-containing enzyme that catalyzes the reversible conversion of UDP-galactopyranose (UDP-Galp) to UDP-galactofuranose (UDP-Galf) and plays a key role in the biosynthesis of the mycobacterial cell wall galactofuran. A soluble, active form of UGM from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MtUGM) was obtained from a dual His6-MBP-tagged MtUGM construct. We present the first complex structures of MtUGM with bound substrate UDP-Galp (both oxidized flavin and reduced flavin). In addition, we have determined the complex structures of MtUGM with inhibitors (UDP and the dideoxy-tetrafluorinated analogues of both UDP-Galp (UDP-F4-Galp) and UDP-Galf (UDP-F4-Galf)), which represent the first complex structures of UGM with an analogue in the furanose form, as well as the first structures of dideoxy-tetrafluorinated sugar analogues bound to a protein. These structures provide detailed insight into ligand recognition by MtUGM and show an overall binding mode similar to those reported for other prokaryotic UGMs. The binding of the ligand induces conformational changes in the enzyme, allowing ligand binding and active-site closure. In addition, the complex structure of MtUGM with UDP-F4-Galf reveals the first detailed insight into how the furanose moiety binds to UGM. In particular, this study confirmed that the furanoside adopts a high-energy conformation ((4)E) within the catalytic pocket. Moreover, these investigations provide structural insights into the enhanced binding of the dideoxy-tetrafluorinated sugars compared to unmodified analogues. These results will help in the design of carbohydrate mimetics and drug development, and show the enormous possibilities for the use of polyfluorination in the design of carbohydrate mimetics.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Tetrafluorination of Sugars as Strategy for Enhancing Protein–Carbohydrate Affinity: Application to UDP-Galp Mutase Inhibition

Inès N'Go; Samuel Golten; Ana Ardá; Javier Sanz Cañada; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero; Bruno Linclau; Stéphane P. Vincent

Tetrafluorinated analogues of both UDP-galactopyranose and UDP-galactofuranose have been synthesized and assayed against UDP-galactopyranose mutase, a key enzyme for Mycobacterium tuberculosis cell wall biosynthesis. Competition assays and STD-NMR spectroscopy techniques have evidenced not only the first unambiguous case of affinity enhancement through local sugar polyfluorination, but also showed that tetrafluorination can still have a beneficial effect on binding when monofluorination at the same position does not.


Chemical Communications | 2004

Efficient synthesis of a nucleoside-diphospho-exo-glycal displaying time-dependent inactivation of UDP-galactopyranose mutase

Audrey Caravano; Stéphane P. Vincent; Pierre Sinaÿ

A short and efficient synthesis of UDP-exo-galactofuranosyl-glycal is presented. This molecule displayed an interesting time-dependent inactivation of UDP-galactopyranose mutase, an essential enzyme of the mycobacterial cell wall biosynthesis.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Pillar[5]arene-based glycoclusters: synthesis and multivalent binding to pathogenic bacterial lectins

Kevin Buffet; Iwona Nierengarten; Nicolas Galanos; Emilie Gillon; Michel Holler; Anne Imberty; Susan E. Matthews; Sébastien Vidal; Stéphane P. Vincent; Jean-François Nierengarten

The synthesis of pillar[5]arene-based glycoclusters has been readily achieved by CuAAC conjugations of azido- and alkyne-functionalized precursors. The lectin binding properties of the resulting glycosylated multivalent ligands have been studied by at least two complementary techniques to provide a good understanding. Three lectins were selected from bacterial pathogens based on their potential therapeutic applications as anti-adhesives, namely LecA and LecB from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and BambL from Burkholderia ambifaria. As a general trend, multivalency improved the binding to lectins and a higher affinity can be obtained by increasing to a certain limit the length of the spacer arm between the carbohydrate subunits and the central macrocyclic core.

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Weidong Pan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Pierre Sinaÿ

École Normale Supérieure

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Michel Holler

University of Strasbourg

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Audrey Caravano

École Normale Supérieure

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