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Dive into the research topics where Valérie de Crécy-Lagard is active.

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Featured researches published by Valérie de Crécy-Lagard.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2005

The Subsystems Approach to Genome Annotation and its Use in the Project to Annotate 1000 Genomes

Ross Overbeek; Tadhg P. Begley; Ralph Butler; Jomuna V. Choudhuri; Han-Yu Chuang; Matthew Cohoon; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; Naryttza N. Diaz; Terry Disz; Robert D. Edwards; Michael Fonstein; Ed D. Frank; Svetlana Gerdes; Elizabeth M. Glass; Alexander Goesmann; Andrew C. Hanson; Dirk Iwata-Reuyl; Roy A. Jensen; Neema Jamshidi; Lutz Krause; Michael Kubal; Niels Bent Larsen; Burkhard Linke; Alice C. McHardy; Folker Meyer; Heiko Neuweger; Gary J. Olsen; Robert Olson; Andrei L. Osterman; Vasiliy A. Portnoy

The release of the 1000th complete microbial genome will occur in the next two to three years. In anticipation of this milestone, the Fellowship for Interpretation of Genomes (FIG) launched the Project to Annotate 1000 Genomes. The project is built around the principle that the key to improved accuracy in high-throughput annotation technology is to have experts annotate single subsystems over the complete collection of genomes, rather than having an annotation expert attempt to annotate all of the genes in a single genome. Using the subsystems approach, all of the genes implementing the subsystem are analyzed by an expert in that subsystem. An annotation environment was created where populated subsystems are curated and projected to new genomes. A portable notion of a populated subsystem was defined, and tools developed for exchanging and curating these objects. Tools were also developed to resolve conflicts between populated subsystems. The SEED is the first annotation environment that supports this model of annotation. Here, we describe the subsystem approach, and offer the first release of our growing library of populated subsystems. The initial release of data includes 180 177 distinct proteins with 2133 distinct functional roles. This data comes from 173 subsystems and 383 different organisms.


PLOS Biology | 2005

Inhibition of Mutation and Combating the Evolution of Antibiotic Resistance

Ryan T. Cirz; Jodie K. Chin; David R. Andes; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; William A. Craig; Floyd E. Romesberg

The emergence of drug-resistant bacteria poses a serious threat to human health. In the case of several antibiotics, including those of the quinolone and rifamycin classes, bacteria rapidly acquire resistance through mutation of chromosomal genes during therapy. In this work, we show that preventing induction of the SOS response by interfering with the activity of the protease LexA renders pathogenic Escherichia coli unable to evolve resistance in vivo to ciprofloxacin or rifampicin, important quinolone and rifamycin antibiotics. We show in vitro that LexA cleavage is induced during RecBC-mediated repair of ciprofloxacin-mediated DNA damage and that this results in the derepression of the SOS-regulated polymerases Pol II, Pol IV and Pol V, which collaborate to induce resistance-conferring mutations. Our findings indicate that the inhibition of mutation could serve as a novel therapeutic strategy to combat the evolution of antibiotic resistance.


Annual Review of Genetics | 2012

Biosynthesis and Function of Posttranscriptional Modifications of Transfer RNAs

Basma El Yacoubi; Marc Bailly; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard

Posttranscriptional modifications of transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are critical for all core aspects of tRNA function, such as folding, stability, and decoding. Most tRNA modifications were discovered in the 1970s; however, the near-complete description of the genes required to introduce the full set of modifications in both yeast and Escherichia coli is very recent. This led to a new appreciation of the key roles of tRNA modifications and tRNA modification enzymes as checkpoints for tRNA integrity and for integrating translation with other cellular functions such as transcription, primary metabolism, and stress resistance. A global survey of tRNA modification enzymes shows that the functional constraints that drive the presence of modifications are often conserved, but the solutions used to fulfill these constraints differ among different kingdoms, organisms, and species.


FEBS Letters | 2010

Deciphering synonymous codons in the three domains of life: Co‐evolution with specific tRNA modification enzymes

Henri Grosjean; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; Christian Marck

The strategies organisms use to decode synonymous codons in cytosolic protein synthesis are not uniform. The complete isoacceptor tRNA repertoire and the type of modified nucleoside found at the wobble position 34 of their anticodons were analyzed in all kingdoms of life. This led to the identification of four main decoding strategies that are diversely used in Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya. Many of the modern tRNA modification enzymes acting at position 34 of tRNAs are present only in specific domains and obviously have arisen late during evolution. In an evolutionary fine‐tuning process, these enzymes must have played an essential role in the progressive introduction of new amino acids, and in the refinement and standardization of the canonical nuclear genetic code observed in all extant organisms (functional convergent evolutionary hypothesis).


PLOS Biology | 2013

The COMBREX Project: Design, Methodology, and Initial Results

Brian P. Anton; Yi-Chien Chang; Peter Brown; Han-Pil Choi; Lina L. Faller; Jyotsna Guleria; Zhenjun Hu; Niels Klitgord; Ami Levy-Moonshine; Almaz Maksad; Varun Mazumdar; Mark McGettrick; Lais Osmani; Revonda Pokrzywa; John Rachlin; Rajeswari Swaminathan; Benjamin Allen; Genevieve Housman; Caitlin Monahan; Krista Rochussen; Kevin Tao; Ashok S. Bhagwat; Steven E. Brenner; Linda Columbus; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; Donald J. Ferguson; Alexey Fomenkov; Giovanni Gadda; Richard D. Morgan; Andrei L. Osterman

Experimental data exists for only a vanishingly small fraction of sequenced microbial genes. This community page discusses the progress made by the COMBREX project to address this important issue using both computational and experimental resources.


The EMBO Journal | 2011

A role for the universal Kae1/Qri7/YgjD (COG0533) family in tRNA modification.

Basma El Yacoubi; Isabelle Hatin; Christopher Deutsch; Tamer Kahveci; Jean-Pierre Rousset; Dirk Iwata-Reuyl; Alexey G. Murzin; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard

The YgjD/Kae1 family (COG0533) has been on the top‐10 list of universally conserved proteins of unknown function for over 5 years. It has been linked to DNA maintenance in bacteria and mitochondria and transcription regulation and telomere homeostasis in eukaryotes, but its actual function has never been found. Based on a comparative genomic and structural analysis, we predicted this family was involved in the biosynthesis of N6‐threonylcarbamoyl adenosine, a universal modification found at position 37 of tRNAs decoding ANN codons. This was confirmed as a yeast mutant lacking Kae1 is devoid of t6A. t6A− strains were also used to reveal that t6A has a critical role in initiation codon restriction to AUG and in restricting frameshifting at tandem ANN codons. We also showed that YaeZ, a YgjD paralog, is required for YgjD function in vivo in bacteria. This work lays the foundation for understanding the pleiotropic role of this universal protein family.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2009

The universal YrdC/Sua5 family is required for the formation of threonylcarbamoyladenosine in tRNA

Basma El Yacoubi; Benjamin J. Lyons; Yulien Cruz; Robert Reddy; Brian E. Nordin; Fabio Agnelli; James R. Williamson; Paul Schimmel; Manal A. Swairjo; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard

Threonylcarbamoyladenosine (t6A) is a universal modification found at position 37 of ANN decoding tRNAs, which imparts a unique structure to the anticodon loop enhancing its binding to ribosomes in vitro. Using a combination of bioinformatic, genetic, structural and biochemical approaches, the universal protein family YrdC/Sua5 (COG0009) was shown to be involved in the biosynthesis of this hypermodified base. Contradictory reports on the essentiality of both the yrdC wild-type gene of Escherichia coli and the SUA5 wild-type gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae led us to reconstruct null alleles for both genes and prove that yrdC is essential in E. coli, whereas SUA5 is dispensable in yeast but results in severe growth phenotypes. Structural and biochemical analyses revealed that the E. coli YrdC protein binds ATP and preferentially binds RNAThr lacking only the t6A modification. This work lays the foundation for elucidating the function of a protein family found in every sequenced genome to date and understanding the role of t6A in vivo.


BMC Genomics | 2009

A subset of the diverse COG0523 family of putative metal chaperones is linked to zinc homeostasis in all kingdoms of life.

Crysten E. Haas; Dmitry A. Rodionov; Janette Kropat; Davin Malasarn; Sabeeha S. Merchant; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard

BackgroundCOG0523 proteins are, like the nickel chaperones of the UreG family, part of the G3E family of GTPases linking them to metallocenter biosynthesis. Even though the first COG0523-encoding gene, cobW, was identified almost 20 years ago, little is known concerning the function of other members belonging to this ubiquitous family.ResultsBased on a combination of comparative genomics, literature and phylogenetic analyses and experimental validations, the COG0523 family can be separated into at least fifteen subgroups. The CobW subgroup involved in cobalamin synthesis represents only one small sub-fraction of the family. Another, larger subgroup, is suggested to play a predominant role in the response to zinc limitation based on the presence of the corresponding COG0523-encoding genes downstream from putative Zur binding sites in many bacterial genomes. Zur binding sites in these genomes are also associated with candidate zinc-independent paralogs of zinc-dependent enzymes. Finally, the potential role of COG0523 in zinc homeostasis is not limited to Bacteria. We have predicted a link between COG0523 and regulation by zinc in Archaea and show that two COG0523 genes are induced upon zinc depletion in a eukaryotic reference organism, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.ConclusionThis work lays the foundation for the pursuit by experimental methods of the specific role of COG0523 members in metal trafficking. Based on phylogeny and comparative genomics, both the metal specificity and the protein target(s) might vary from one COG0523 subgroup to another. Additionally, Zur-dependent expression of COG0523 and putative paralogs of zinc-dependent proteins may represent a mechanism for hierarchal zinc distribution and zinc sparing in the face of inadequate zinc nutrition.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2015

Systematic genome assessment of B-vitamin biosynthesis suggests co-operation among gut microbes

Stefania Magnusdottir; Dmitry A. Ravcheev; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; Ines Thiele

The human gut microbiota supplies its host with essential nutrients, including B-vitamins. Using the PubSEED platform, we systematically assessed the genomes of 256 common human gut bacteria for the presence of biosynthesis pathways for eight B-vitamins: biotin, cobalamin, folate, niacin, pantothenate, pyridoxine, riboflavin, and thiamin. On the basis of the presence and absence of genome annotations, we predicted that each of the eight vitamins was produced by 40–65% of the 256 human gut microbes. The distribution of synthesis pathways was diverse; some genomes had all eight biosynthesis pathways, whereas others contained no de novo synthesis pathways. We compared our predictions to experimental data from 16 organisms and found 88% of our predictions to be in agreement with published data. In addition, we identified several pairs of organisms whose vitamin synthesis pathway pattern complemented those of other organisms. This analysis suggests that human gut bacteria actively exchange B-vitamins among each other, thereby enabling the survival of organisms that do not synthesize any of these essential cofactors. This result indicates the co-evolution of the gut microbes in the human gut environment. Our work presents the first comprehensive assessment of the B-vitamin synthesis capabilities of the human gut microbiota. We propose that in addition to diet, the gut microbiota is an important source of B-vitamins, and that changes in the gut microbiota composition can severely affect our dietary B-vitamin requirements.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Biosynthesis of threonylcarbamoyl adenosine (t6A), a universal tRNA nucleoside.

Christopher Deutsch; Basma El Yacoubi; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; Dirk Iwata-Reuyl

Background: The modified nucleoside t6A is important for tRNA function. Results: The proteins YrdC/YgjD/YeaZ/YjeE are necessary and sufficient for the biosynthesis of t6A in bacteria. Conclusion: Only the universal protein families YrdC and YgjD are conserved in the biosynthesis of t6A among all organisms. Significance: Elucidating the enzymes responsible for t6A biosynthesis, a universal modification of tRNA, is central to understanding its physiological role. The anticodon stem-loop (ASL) of transfer RNAs (tRNAs) drives decoding by interacting directly with the mRNA through codon/anticodon pairing. Chemically complex nucleoside modifications found in the ASL at positions 34 or 37 are known to be required for accurate decoding. Although over 100 distinct modifications have been structurally characterized in tRNAs, only a few are universally conserved, among them threonylcarbamoyl adenosine (t6A), found at position 37 in the anticodon loop of a subset of tRNA. Structural studies predict an important role for t6A in translational fidelity, and in vivo work supports this prediction. Although pioneering work in the 1970s identified the fundamental substrates for t6A biosynthesis, the enzymes responsible for its biosynthesis have remained an enigma. We report here the discovery that in bacteria four proteins (YgjD, YrdC, YjeE, and YeaZ) are both necessary and sufficient for t6A biosynthesis in vitro. Notably, YrdC and YgjD are members of universally conserved families that were ranked among the top 10 proteins of unknown function in need of functional characterization, while YeaZ and YjeE are specific to bacteria. This latter observation, coupled with the essentiality of all four proteins in bacteria, establishes this pathway as a compelling new target for antimicrobial development.

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Dirk Iwata-Reuyl

Scripps Research Institute

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Paul Schimmel

Scripps Research Institute

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Manal A. Swairjo

Scripps Research Institute

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