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Dive into the research topics where Thierry Rose is active.

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Featured researches published by Thierry Rose.


Cell | 2001

Structural basis of the interaction of the pyelonephritic E. coli adhesin to its human kidney receptor.

Karen W. Dodson; Jerome S. Pinkner; Thierry Rose; Göran Magnusson; Scott J. Hultgren; Gabriel Waksman

PapG is the adhesin at the tip of the P pilus that mediates attachment of uropathogenic Escherichia coli to the uroepithelium of the human kidney. The human specific allele of PapG binds to globoside (GbO4), which consists of the tetrasaccharide GalNAc beta 1-3Gal alpha 1-4Gal beta 1-4Glc linked to ceramide. Here, we present the crystal structures of a binary complex of the PapG receptor binding domain bound to GbO4 as well as the unbound form of the adhesin. The biological importance of each of the residues involved in binding was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. These studies provide a molecular snapshot of a host-pathogen interaction that determines the tropism of uropathogenic E. coli for the human kidney and is critical to the pathogenesis of pyelonephritis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Structure and dynamics of the pore of inwardly rectifying K(ATP) channels.

Gildas Loussouarn; Elena N. Makhina; Thierry Rose; Colin G. Nichols

Inwardly rectifying K+ currents are generated by a complex of four Kir (Kir1–6) subunits. Pore properties are conferred by the second transmembrane domain (M2) of each subunit. Using cadmium ions as a cysteine-interacting probe, we examined the accessibility of substituted cysteines in M2 of the Kir6.2 subunit of inwardly rectifying KATP channels. The ability of Cd2+ ions to inhibit channels was used as the estimate of accessibility. The distribution of Cd2+ accessibility is consistent with an α-helical structure of M2. The apparent surface of reactivity is broad, and the most reactive residues correspond to the solvent-accessible residues in the bacterial KcsA channel crystal structure. In several mutants, single channel measurements indicated that inhibition occurred by a single transition from the open state to a zero-conductance state. Analysis of currents expressed from mixtures of control and L164C mutant subunits indicated that at least three cysteines are required for coordination of the Cd2+ ion. Application of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-diphosphate to inside-out membrane patches stabilized the open state of all mutants and also reduced cadmium sensitivity. Moreover, the Cd2+ sensitivity of several mutants was greatly reduced in the presence of inhibitory ATP concentrations. Taken together, these results are consistent with state-dependent accessibility of single Cd2+ions to coordination sites within a relatively narrow inner vestibule.


Proteins | 2001

Molecular mapping of thrombin-receptor interactions

Youhna M. Ayala; Angelene M. Cantwell; Thierry Rose; Leslie A. Bush; Daniele Arosio; Enrico Di Cera

In addition to its procoagulant and anticoagulant roles in the blood coagulation cascade, thrombin works as a signaling molecule when it interacts with the G‐protein coupled receptors PAR1, PAR3, and PAR4. We have mapped the thrombin epitopes responsible for these interactions using enzymatic assays and Ala scanning mutagenesis. The epitopes overlap considerably, and are almost identical to those of fibrinogen and fibrin, but a few unanticipated differences are uncovered that help explain the higher (90‐fold) specificity of PAR1 relative to PAR3 and PAR4. The most critical residues for the interaction with the PARs are located around the active site where mutations affect recognition in the order PAR4 > PAR3 > PAR1. Other important residues for PAR binding cluster in a small area of exosite I where mutations affect recognition in the order PAR1 > PAR3 > PAR4. Owing to this hierarchy of effects, the mutation W215A selectively compromises PAR4 cleavage, whereas the mutation R67A abrogates the higher specificity of PAR1 relative to PAR3 and PAR4. 3D models of thrombin complexed with PAR1, PAR3, and PAR4 are constructed and account for the perturbations documented by the mutagenesis studies. Proteins 2001;45:107–116.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

The C-terminal Sequence Encodes Function in Serine Proteases*

Maxwell M. Krem; Thierry Rose; Enrico Di Cera

Serine proteases of the chymotrypsin family have maintained a common fold over an evolutionary span of more than one billion years. Notwithstanding modest changes in sequence, this class of enzymes has developed a wide variety of substrate specificities and important biological functions. Remarkably, the C-terminal portion of the sequence in the protease domain accounts fully for this functional diversity. This portion is often encoded by a single exon and contains most of the residues forming the contact surface in the active site for the P1–P3 residues of the substrate, as well as domains responsible for the modulation of catalytic activity. The evolution of serine proteases was therefore driven by optimization of contacts made with the unprimed subsites of the substrate and targeted a relatively short portion of the sequence toward the C-terminal end. The dominant role of the C-terminal sequence should facilitate the identification of function in newly discovered genes belonging to this class of enzymes.


Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine | 2000

Sequence Determinants of Function and Evolution in Serine Proteases

Maxwell M. Krem; Thierry Rose; Enrico Di Cera

Serine proteases of the chymotrypsin family have maintained a common fold over an evolutionary span of more than one billion years. Notwithstanding modest changes in sequence, this class of enzymes has developed a wide variety of substrate specificities and important biological functions such as fibrinolysis, blood coagulation, and complement activation. Recently it has become apparent that the protease domain, especially its C-terminal sequence, accounts fully for this functional diversity and is the most important element in shaping serine protease evolution.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Flexibility of the Kir6.2 inward rectifier K+ channel pore

Gildas Loussouarn; L. Revell Phillips; Ricard Masia; Thierry Rose; Colin G. Nichols

Interactions of sulfhydryl reagents with introduced cysteines in the pore-forming (Kir6.2) subunits of the KATP channel were examined. 2-Aminoethyl methanethiosulfonate (MTSEA+) failed to modify Cd2+-insensitive control-Kir6.2 channels, but rapidly and irreversibly modified Kir6.2[L164C] (L164C) channels. Although a single Cd2+ ion is coordinated by L164C, four MTSEA+ “hits” can occur, each sequentially reducing the single-channel current. A dimeric fusion of control-Kir6.2 and L164C subunits generates Cd2+-insensitive channels, confirming that at least three cysteines are required for coordination, but MTSEA+ modification of the dimer occurs in two hits. L164C channels were not modified by bromotrimethyl ammoniumbimane (qBBr+), even though qBBr+ caused voltage-dependent block (as opposed to modification) that was comparable to that of MTSEA+ or 3-(triethylammonium)propyl methanethiosulfonate (MTSPTrEA+), implying that qBBr+ can also enter the inner cavity but does not modify L164C residues. The Kir channel pore structure was modeled by homology with the KcsA crystal structure. A stable conformation optimally places the four L164C side chains for coordination of a single Cd2+ ion. Modification of these cysteines by up to four MTSEA+ (or three MTSPTrEA+, or two qBBr+) does not require widening of the cavity to accommodate the derivatives within it. However, like the KcsA crystal structure, the energy-minimized model shows a narrowing at the inner entrance, and in the Kir6.2 model this narrowing excludes all ions. To allow entry of ions as large as MTSPTrEA+ or qBBr+, the entrance must widen to >8 Å, but this widening is readily accomplished by minimal M2 helix motion and side-chain rearrangement.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2004

Molecular Basis of Inward Rectification: Polyamine Interaction Sites Located by Combined Channel and Ligand Mutagenesis

Harley T. Kurata; L. Revell Phillips; Thierry Rose; Gildas Loussouarn; Stefan Herlitze; Hariolf Fritzenschaft; Decha Enkvetchakul; Colin G. Nichols; Thomas Baukrowitz

Polyamines cause inward rectification of (Kir) K+ channels, but the mechanism is controversial. We employed scanning mutagenesis of Kir6.2, and a structural series of blocking diamines, to combinatorially examine the role of both channel and blocker charges. We find that introduced glutamates at any pore-facing residue in the inner cavity, up to and including the entrance to the selectivity filter, can confer strong rectification. As these negative charges are moved higher (toward the selectivity filter), or lower (toward the cytoplasm), they preferentially enhance the potency of block by shorter, or longer, diamines, respectively. MTSEA+ modification of engineered cysteines in the inner cavity reduces rectification, but modification below the inner cavity slows spermine entry and exit, without changing steady-state rectification. The data provide a coherent explanation of classical strong rectification as the result of polyamine block in the inner cavity and selectivity filter.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Elucidation of the self-assembly pathway of lanreotide octapeptide into beta-sheet nanotubes: role of two stable intermediates.

Emilie Pouget; Nicolas Fay; Erik Dujardin; Nadège Jamin; Patrick Berthault; Lionel Perrin; Anjali Pandit; Thierry Rose; Céline Valéry; Daniel Thomas; Maı̈té Paternostre; Franck Artzner

Nanofabrication by molecular self-assembly involves the design of molecules and self-assembly strategies so that shape and chemical complementarities drive the units to organize spontaneously into the desired structures. The power of self-assembly makes it the ubiquitous strategy of living organized matter and provides a powerful tool to chemists. However, a challenging issue in the self-assembly of complex supramolecular structures is to understand how kinetically efficient pathways emerge from the multitude of possible transition states and routes. Unfortunately, very few systems provide an intelligible structure and formation mechanism on which new models can be developed. Here, we elucidate the molecular and supramolecular self-assembly mechanism of synthetic octapeptide into nanotubes in equilibrium conditions. Their complex hierarchical self-assembly has recently been described at the mesoscopic level, and we show now that this system uniquely exhibits three assembly stages and three intermediates: (i) a peptide dimer is evidenced by both analytical centrifugation and NMR translational diffusion experiments; (ii) an open ribbon and (iii) an unstable helical ribbon are both visualized by transmission electron microscopy and characterized by small angle X-ray scattering. Interestingly, the structural features of two stable intermediates are related to the final nanotube organization as they set, respectively, the nanotube wall thickness and the final wall curvature radius. We propose that a specific self-assembly pathway is selected by the existence of such preorganized and stable intermediates so that a unique final molecular organization is kinetically favored. Our findings suggests that the rational design of oligopeptides can encode both molecular- and macro-scale morphological characteristics of their higher-order assemblies, thus opening the way to ultrahigh resolution peptide scaffold engineering.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

The Thrombin Epitope Recognizing Thrombomodulin Is a Highly Cooperative Hot Spot in Exosite I

Agustin O. Pineda; Angelene M. Cantwell; Leslie A. Bush; Thierry Rose; Enrico Di Cera

The functional epitope of thrombin recognizing thrombomodulin was mapped using Ala-scanning mutagenesis of 54 residues located around the active site, the Na+ binding loop, the 186-loop, the autolysis loop, exosite I, and exosite II. The epitope for thrombomodulin binding is shaped as a hot spot in exosite I, centered around the buried ion quartet formed by Arg67, Lys70, Glu77, and Glu80, and capped by the hydrophobic residues Tyr76 and Ile82. The hot spot is a much smaller subset of the structural epitope for thrombomodulin binding recently documented by x-ray crystallography. Interestingly, the contribution of each residue of the epitope to the binding free energy shows no correlation with the change in its accessible surface area upon formation of the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex. Furthermore, residues of the epitope are strongly coupled in the recognition of thrombomodulin, as seen for the interaction of human growth hormone and insulin with their receptors. Finally, the Ala substitution of two negatively charged residues in exosite II, Asp100 and Asp178, is found unexpectedly to significantly increase thrombomodulin binding.


Trends in Cardiovascular Medicine | 2002

Structural basis of inward rectifying potassium channel gating.

Gildas Loussouarn; Thierry Rose; Colin G. Nichols

The last 10 years have seen rapid advances in the understanding of potassium channel function. Since the first inward rectifying (Kir) channels were cloned in 1994, the structural basis of channel function has been significantly elucidated, and determination of the crystal structure of a bacterial K channel (KcsA) in 1998 provided an atomic resolution of the permeation pathway. This review considers recent experimental studies aimed at uncovering the structural basis of Kir channel activity, and the applicability of comparative models based on KcsA to illuminate Kir channel pore structure and opening and closing processes.

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Colin G. Nichols

Washington University in St. Louis

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Angelene M. Cantwell

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gildas Loussouarn

Washington University in St. Louis

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L. Revell Phillips

Washington University in St. Louis

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Leslie A. Bush

Washington University in St. Louis

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Maxwell M. Krem

Washington University in St. Louis

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Agustin O. Pineda

Washington University in St. Louis

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Daniele Arosio

Washington University in St. Louis

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