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Dive into the research topics where Thierry G. A. Lonhienne is active.

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Featured researches published by Thierry G. A. Lonhienne.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2000

Cold-adapted enzymes: from fundamentals to biotechnology

Charles Gerday; Mohamed Aittaleb; Mostafa Bentahir; Jean-Pierre Chessa; Paule Claverie; Tony Collins; Salvino D'Amico; Joëlle Dumont; Geneviève Garsoux; Daphné Georlette; Anne Hoyoux; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Marie-Alice Meuwis; Georges Feller

Psychrophilic enzymes produced by cold-adapted microorganisms display a high catalytic efficiency and are most often, if not always, associated with high thermosensitivity. Using X-ray crystallography, these properties are beginning to become understood, and the rules governing their adaptation to cold appear to be relatively diverse. The application of these enzymes offers considerable potential to the biotechnology industry, for example, in the detergent and food industries, for the production of fine chemicals and in bioremediation processes.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000

Psychrophilic enzymes: revisiting the thermodynamic parameters of activation may explain local flexibility.

Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Charles Gerday; Georges Feller

Basic theoretical and practical aspects of activation parameters are briefly reviewed in the context of cold-adaptation. In order to reduce the error impact inherent to the transition state theory on the absolute values of the free energy (DeltaG(#)), enthalpy (DeltaH(#)) and entropy (DeltaS(#)) of activation, it is proposed to compare the variation of these parameters between psychrophilic and mesophilic enzymes, namely Delta(DeltaG(#))(p-m), Delta(DeltaH(#))(p-m) and Delta(DeltaS(#))(p-m). Calculation of these parameters from the available literature shows that the main adaptation of psychrophilic enzymes lies in a significant decrease of DeltaH(#), therefore leading to a higher k(cat), especially at low temperatures. Moreover, in all cases including cold-blooded animals, DeltaS(#) exerts an opposite and negative effect on the gain in k(cat). It is argued that the magnitude of this counter-effect of DeltaS(#) can be reduced by keeping some stable domains, while increasing the flexibility of the structures required to improve catalysis at low temperature, as demonstrated in several cold-active enzymes. This enthalpic-entropic balance provides a new approach explaining the two types of conformational stability detected by recent microcalorimetric experiments on psychrophilic enzymes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Plants can use protein as a nitrogen source without assistance from other organisms

Chanyarat Paungfoo-Lonhienne; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Doris Rentsch; Nicole Robinson; Michael R. Christie; Richard I. Webb; Harshi K. Gamage; Bernard J. Carroll; Peer M. Schenk; Susanne Schmidt

Nitrogen is quantitatively the most important nutrient that plants acquire from the soil. It is well established that plant roots take up nitrogen compounds of low molecular mass, including ammonium, nitrate, and amino acids. However, in the soil of natural ecosystems, nitrogen occurs predominantly as proteins. This complex organic form of nitrogen is considered to be not directly available to plants. We examined the long-held view that plants depend on specialized symbioses with fungi (mycorrhizas) to access soil protein and studied the woody heathland plant Hakea actites and the herbaceous model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, which do not form mycorrhizas. We show that both species can use protein as a nitrogen source for growth without assistance from other organisms. We identified two mechanisms by which roots access protein. Roots exude proteolytic enzymes that digest protein at the root surface and possibly in the apoplast of the root cortex. Intact protein also was taken up into root cells most likely via endocytosis. These findings change our view of the spectrum of nitrogen sources that plants can access and challenge the current paradigm that plants rely on microbes and soil fauna for the breakdown of organic matter.


Science | 2014

Structural Basis for Assembly and Function of a Heterodimeric Plant Immune Receptor

Simon J. Williams; Kee Hoon Sohn; Li Wan; Maud Bernoux; Panagiotis F. Sarris; Cécile Segonzac; Thomas Ve; Yan Ma; Simon B. Saucet; Daniel J. Ericsson; Lachlan W. Casey; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Donald J. Winzor; Xiaoxiao Zhang; Anne Coerdt; Jane E. Parker; Peter N. Dodds; Bostjan Kobe; Jonathan D. G. Jones

Universal Immune Function Certain pathogen effectors are detected in plants by cytoplasmic receptors. First solving the crystal structures of Arabidopsis receptors, Williams et al. (p. 299; see the Perspective by Nishimura and Dangl) discovered that in the resting state, the structures form a heterodimer that readies the complex for effector binding and keeps the signaling domains from firing too early. Once the pathogen effector binds, the structure of the complex shifts such that the signaling domains can form a homodimer to initiate downstream signaling. Similarities between these plant-pathogen receptors and Toll-like receptors in animals suggest the molecular mechanisms may translate broadly. A heterodimer stands at the ready; a homodimer responds with action. [Also see Perspective by Nishimura and Dangl] Cytoplasmic plant immune receptors recognize specific pathogen effector proteins and initiate effector-triggered immunity. In Arabidopsis, the immune receptors RPS4 and RRS1 are both required to activate defense to three different pathogens. We show that RPS4 and RRS1 physically associate. Crystal structures of the N-terminal Toll–interleukin-1 receptor/resistance (TIR) domains of RPS4 and RRS1, individually and as a heterodimeric complex (respectively at 2.05, 1.75, and 2.65 angstrom resolution), reveal a conserved TIR/TIR interaction interface. We show that TIR domain heterodimerization is required to form a functional RRS1/RPS4 effector recognition complex. The RPS4 TIR domain activates effector-independent defense, which is inhibited by the RRS1 TIR domain through the heterodimerization interface. Thus, RPS4 and RRS1 function as a receptor complex in which the two components play distinct roles in recognition and signaling.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Endocytosis-like protein uptake in the bacterium Gemmata obscuriglobus

Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Evgeny Sagulenko; Richard I. Webb; Kuo-Chang Lee; Josef D. Franke; Damien P. Devos; Amanda Nouwens; Bernard J. Carroll; John A. Fuerst

Endocytosis is a process by which extracellular material such as macromolecules can be incorporated into cells via a membrane-trafficking system. Although universal among eukaryotes, endocytosis has not been identified in Bacteria or Archaea. However, intracellular membranes are known to compartmentalize cells of bacteria in the phylum Planctomycetes, suggesting the potential for endocytosis and membrane trafficking in members of this phylum. Here we show that cells of the planctomycete Gemmata obscuriglobus have the ability to uptake proteins present in the external milieu in an energy-dependent process analogous to eukaryotic endocytosis, and that internalized proteins are associated with vesicle membranes. Occurrence of such ability in a bacterium is consistent with autogenous evolution of endocytosis and the endomembrane system in an ancestral noneukaryote cell.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Enzyme activity determination on macromolecular substrates by isothermal titration calorimetry: application to mesophilic and psychrophilic chitinases

Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Etienne Baise; Georges Feller; Vassilis Bouriotis; Charles Gerday

Isothermal titration calorimetry has been applied to the determination of the kinetic parameters of chitinases (EC 3.2.1.14) by monitoring the heat released during the hydrolysis of chitin glycosidic bonds. Experiments were carried out using two different macromolecular substrates: a soluble polymer of N-acetylglucosamine and the insoluble chitin from crab shells. Different experimental temperatures were used in order to compare the thermodependence of the activity of two chitinases from the psychrophile Arthrobacter sp. TAD20 and of chitinase A from the mesophile Serratia marcescens. The method allowed to determine unequivocally the catalytic rate constant k(cat), the activation energy (E(a)) and the thermodynamic activation parameters (DeltaG(#), DeltaH(#), DeltaS(#)) of the chitinolytic reaction on the soluble substrate. The catalytic activity has also been determined on insoluble chitin, which displays an effect of substrate saturation by chitinases. On both substrates, the thermodependence of the activity of the psychrophilic chitinases was lower than that observed with the mesophilic counterpart.


Traffic | 2012

Structural Basis of High-Affinity Nuclear Localization Signal Interactions with Importin-alpha

Mary Marfori; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Jade K. Forwood; Bostjan Kobe

Classical nuclear localization signals (cNLSs), comprising one (monopartite cNLSs) or two clusters of basic residues connected by a 10–12 residue linker (bipartite cNLSs), are recognized by the nuclear import factor importin‐α. The cNLSs bind along a concave groove on importin‐α; however, specificity determinants of cNLSs remain poorly understood. We present a structural and interaction analysis study of importin‐α binding to both designed and naturally occurring high‐affinity cNLS‐like sequences; the peptide inhibitors Bimax1 and Bimax2, and cNLS peptides of cap‐binding protein 80. Our data suggest that cNLSs and cNLS‐like sequences can achieve high affinity through maximizing interactions at the importin‐α minor site, and by taking advantage of multiple linker region interactions. Our study defines an extended set of binding cavities on the importin‐α surface, and also expands on recent observations that longer linker sequences are allowed, and that long‐range electrostatic complementarity can contribute to cNLS‐binding affinity. Altogether, our study explains the molecular and structural basis of the results of a number of recent studies, including systematic mutagenesis and peptide library approaches, and provides an improved level of understanding on the specificity determinants of a cNLS. Our results have implications for identifying cNLSs in novel proteins.


Plant and Soil | 2012

Past, present and future of organic nutrients

Chanyarat Paungfoo-Lonhienne; Jozef Visser; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Susanne Schmidt

BackgroundSlowing crop yield increases despite high fertiliser application rates, declining soil health and off-site pollution are testimony that many bioproduction systems require innovative nutrient supply strategies. One avenue is a greater contribution of organic compounds as nutrient sources for crops. That plants take up and metabolise organic molecules (‘organic nutrients’) has been discovered prior to more recent interest with scientific roots reaching far into the 19th century. Research on organic nutrients continued in the early decades of the 20th century, but after two world wars and yield increases achieved with mineral and synthetic fertilisers, a smooth continuation of the research was not to be expected, and we find major gaps in the transmission of methods and knowledge.ScopeAddressing the antagonism of ‘organicists’ and ‘mineralists’ in plant nutrition, we illustrate how the focus of crop nutrition has shifted from organic to inorganic nutrients. We discuss reasons and provide evidence for a role of organic compounds as nutrients and signalling agents.ConclusionAfter decades of focussing on inorganic nutrients, perspectives have greatly widened again. As has occurred before in agricultural history, science has to validate agronomic practises. We argue that a framework that views plants as mixotrophs with an inherent ability to use organic nutrients, via direct uptake or aided by exoenzyme-mediated degradation, will transform nutrient management and crop breeding to complement inorganic and synthetic fertilisers with organic nutrients.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Cloning, Sequences, and Characterization of Two Chitinase Genes from the Antarctic Arthrobacter sp. Strain TAD20: Isolation and Partial Characterization of the Enzymes

Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Constantin E. Vorgias; Laurent Buchon; Charles Gerday; Vassilis Bouriotis

Arthrobacter sp. strain TAD20, a chitinolytic gram-positive organism, was isolated from the sea bottom along the Antarctic ice shell. Arthrobacter sp. strain TAD20 secretes two major chitinases, ChiA and ChiB (ArChiA and ArChiB), in response to chitin induction. A single chromosomal DNA fragment containing the genes coding for both chitinases was cloned in Escherichia coli. DNA sequencing analysis of this fragment revealed two contiguous open reading frames coding for the precursors of ArChiA (881 amino acids [aa]) and ArChiB (578 aa). ArChiA and ArChiB are modular enzymes consisting of a glycosyl-hydrolase family 18 catalytic domain as well as two and one chitin-binding domains, respectively. The catalytic domain of ArChiA exhibits 55% identity with a chitodextrinase from Vibrio furnissii. The ArChiB catalytic domain exhibits 33% identity with chitinase A of Bacillus circulans. The ArChiA chitin-binding domains are homologous to the chitin-binding domain of ArChiB. ArChiA and ArChiB were purified to homogeneity from the native Arthrobacter strain and partially characterized. Thermal unfolding of ArChiA, ArChiB, and chitinase A of Serratia marcescens was studied using differential scanning calorimetry. ArChiA and ArChiB, compared to their mesophilic counterpart, exhibited increased heat lability, similar to other cold-adapted enzymes.


Plant Physiology | 2010

DNA Is Taken Up by Root Hairs and Pollen, and Stimulates Root and Pollen Tube Growth

Chanyarat Paungfoo-Lonhienne; Thierry G. A. Lonhienne; Stephen R. Mudge; Peer M. Schenk; Michael Christie; Bernard J. Carroll; Susanne Schmidt

Phosphorus (P) enters roots as inorganic phosphate (Pi) derived from organic and inorganic P compounds in the soil. Nucleic acids can support plant growth as the sole source of P in axenic culture but are thought to be converted into Pi by plant-derived nucleases and phosphatases prior to uptake. Here, we show that a nuclease-resistant analog of DNA is taken up by plant cells. Fluorescently labeled S-DNA of 25 bp, which is protected against enzymatic breakdown by its phosphorothioate backbone, was taken up and detected in root cells including root hairs and pollen tubes. These results indicate that current views of plant P acquisition may have to be revised to include uptake of DNA into cells. We further show that addition of DNA to Pi-containing growth medium enhanced the growth of lateral roots and root hairs even though plants were P replete and had similar biomass as plants supplied with Pi only. Exogenously supplied DNA increased length growth of pollen tubes, which were studied because they have similar elongated and polarized growth as root hairs. Our results indicate that DNA is not only taken up and used as a P source by plants, but ironically and independent of Pi supply, DNA also induces morphological changes in roots similar to those observed with P limitation. This study provides, to our knowledge, first evidence that exogenous DNA could act nonspecifically as signaling molecules for root development.

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Luke W. Guddat

University of Queensland

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Amanda Nouwens

University of Queensland

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