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Dive into the research topics where Véronique Anton Leberre is active.

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Featured researches published by Véronique Anton Leberre.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2013

Dendrimer functionalization of gold surface improves the measurement of protein–DNA interactions by surface plasmon resonance imaging

Flavien Pillet; Aurore Sanchez; Cécile Formosa; Marjorie Séverac; Emmanuelle Trévisiol; Jean-Yves Bouet; Véronique Anton Leberre

Surface Plasmon Resonance imaging (SPRi) is a label free technique typically used to follow biomolecular interactions in real time. SPRi offers the possibility to simultaneously investigate numerous interactions and is dedicated to high throughput analysis. However, precise determination of binding constants between partners is not highly reliable. We report here a dendrimer functionalization of gold surface that significantly improves selectivity of the detection of protein-DNA interactions. We showed that amino-gold surface functionalization with phosphorus dendrimers of fourth generation (G4) allowed complete coverage of the gold surface and the increase of the surface roughness. We optimized the conditions for DNA probe deposition to allow accurate detection of a well-known protein-DNA interaction involved in bacterial chromosome segregation. Using this G4-functionalized surface, the specificity of the SPRi response was significantly improved allowing discrimination between protein and DNA interactions of different strengths. Kinetic constants similar to those obtained with other techniques currently used in molecular biology were only obtained with the G4 dendrimer functionalized surface. This study demonstrated the benefit of using dendrimeric surfaces for sensitive high throughput SPRi analysis.


Fems Yeast Research | 2009

The YTA7 gene is involved in the regulation of the isoprenoid pathway in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Klaudia Kuranda; Kariona Grabinska; Thierry Bergès; Francis Karst; Véronique Anton Leberre; Serguei Sokol; Jean François; Grażyna Palamarczyk

The isoprenoid pathway in yeasts is important not only for sterol biosynthesis but also for the production of nonsterol molecules, deriving from farnesyl diphosphate (FPP), implicated in N-glycosylation and biosynthesis of heme and ubiquinones. FPP formed from mevalonate in a reaction catalyzed by FPP synthase (Erg20p). In order to investigate the regulation of Erg20p in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we searched for its protein partners using a two-hybrid screen, and identified five interacting proteins, among them Yta7p. Subsequently, we showed that Yta7p was a membrane-associated protein localized both to the nucleus and to the endoplasmic reticulum. Deletion of YTA7 affected the enzymatic activity of cis-prenyltransferase (the enzyme that utilizes FPP for dolichol biosynthesis) and the cellular levels of isoprenoid compounds. Additionally, it rendered cells hypersensitive to lovastatin, an inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMGR) that acts upstream of FPP synthase in the isoprenoid pathway. While HMGR is encoded by two genes, HMG1 and HMG2, only HMG2 overexpression was able to restore growth of the yta7Delta cells in the presence of lovastatin. Moreover, the expression level of the S. cerevisiae YTA7 gene was altered upon impairment of the isoprenoid pathway not only by lovastatin but also by zaragozic acid, an inhibitor of squalene synthase. Altogether, these results provide substantial evidence of Yta7p involvement in the regulation of isoprenoid biosynthesis.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Investigating the function of an arabinan utilization locus isolated from a termite gut community.

Grégory Arnal; Géraldine Bastien; Nelly Monties; Anne Abot; Véronique Anton Leberre; Sophie Bozonnet; Michael J. O'Donohue; Claire Dumon

ABSTRACT Biocatalysts are essential for the development of bioprocesses efficient for plant biomass degradation. Previously, a metagenomic clone containing DNA from termite gut microbiota was pinpointed in a functional screening that revealed the presence of arabinofuranosidase activity. Subsequent genetic and bioinformatic analysis revealed that the DNA fragment belonged to a member of the genus Bacteroides and encoded 19 open reading frames (ORFs), and annotation suggested the presence of hypothetical transporter and regulator proteins and others involved in the catabolism of pentose sugar. In this respect and considering the phenotype of the metagenomic clone, it was noted that among the ORFs, there are four putative arabinose-specific glycoside hydrolases, two from family GH43 and two from GH51. In this study, a thorough bioinformatics analysis of the metagenomic clone gene cluster has been performed and the four aforementioned glycoside hydrolases have been characterized. Together, the results provide evidence that the gene cluster is a polysaccharide utilization locus dedicated to the breakdown of the arabinan component in pectin and related substrates. Characterization of the two GH43 and the two GH51 glycoside hydrolases has revealed that each of these enzymes displays specific catalytic capabilities and that when these are combined the enzymes act synergistically, increasing the efficiency of arabinan degradation.


BMC Genomics | 2016

CAZyChip: dynamic assessment of exploration of glycoside hydrolases in microbial ecosystems.

Anne Abot; Grégory Arnal; Lucas Auer; Adèle Lazuka; Delphine Labourdette; Sophie Lamarre; Lidwine Trouilh; Elisabeth Laville; Vincent Lombard; Gabrielle Potocki-Véronèse; Bernard Henrissat; Michael J. O’Donohue; Guillermina Hernandez-Raquet; Claire Dumon; Véronique Anton Leberre

BackgroundMicroorganisms constitute a reservoir of enzymes involved in environmental carbon cycling and degradation of plant polysaccharides through their production of a vast variety of Glycoside Hydrolases (GH). The CAZyChip was developed to allow a rapid characterization at transcriptomic level of these GHs and to identify enzymes acting on hydrolysis of polysaccharides or glycans.ResultsThis DNA biochip contains the signature of 55,220 bacterial GHs available in the CAZy database. Probes were designed using two softwares, and microarrays were directly synthesized using the in situ ink-jet technology. CAZyChip specificity and reproducibility was validated by hybridization of known GHs RNA extracted from recombinant E. coli strains, which were previously identified by a functional metagenomic approach. The GHs arsenal was also studied in bioprocess conditions using rumen derived microbiota.ConclusionsThe CAZyChip appears to be a user friendly tool for profiling the expression of a large variety of GHs. It can be used to study temporal variations of functional diversity, thereby facilitating the identification of new efficient candidates for enzymatic conversions from various ecosystems.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2015

Phytochip: development of a DNA-microarray for rapid and accurate identification of Pseudo-nitzschia spp and other harmful algal species.

Charlotte Noyer; Anne Abot; Lidwine Trouilh; Véronique Anton Leberre; Catherine Dreanno

Detection of harmful algal blooms has become a challenging concern because of the direct impacts on public health and economy. The identification of toxic dinoflagellates and diatoms in monitoring programs requires an extensive taxonomic expertise and is time consuming. Advances in molecular biology have allowed the development of new approaches, more rapid, accurate and cost-effective for detecting these microorganisms. In this context, we developed a new DNA microarray (called, Phytochip) for the simultaneous detection of multiple HAB species with a particular emphasis on Pseudo-nitzschia species. Oligonucleotide probes were designed along the rRNA operon. After DNA extraction, the target rDNA genes were amplified and labeled using an asymmetric PCR; then, the amplicons were hybridized to the oligonucleotide probes present on the chips. The total assay from seawater sampling to data acquisition can be performed within a working day. Specificity and sensitivity were assessed by using monoclonal cultures, mixtures of species and field samples spiked with a known amount of cultured cells. The Phytochip with its 81 validated oligonucleotide probes was able to detect 12 species of Pseudo-nitzschia and 11 species of dinoflagellates among which were 3 species of Karenia and 3 species of Alexandrium. The Phytochip was applied to environmental samples already characterized by light microscopy and cloned into DNA libraries. The hybridizations on the Phytochip were in good agreement with the sequences retrieved from the clone libraries and the microscopic observations. The Phytochip enables a reliable multiplex detection of phytoplankton and can assist a water quality monitoring program as well as more general ecological research.


Oncologie | 2009

Molecular analysis for medicine: a new technological platform based on nanopatterning and label-free optical detection

Jean-Christophe Cau; H. Lalo; Childerick Severac; Jean-Pierre Peyrade; Emmanuelle Trévisiol; Véronique Anton Leberre; Jean François; Christophe Vieu

RésuméDans ce travail nous montrons que la structuration à l’échelle nanométrique de biomolécules sondes par lithographie douce permet de fabriquer des puces à protéines à un coût de production suffisamment réduit pour entrevoir leur utilisation dans le domaine de l’analysemoléculaire médicale. La combinaison d’un procédé d’impression moléculaire et d’une détection optique sans marquage fondée sur le principe de la diffraction de la lumière est mise en oeuvre afin de produire des supports d’analyse en verre comportant des motifs nanométriques et un scanner de diffraction qui permet la lecture d’un test biologique multiplexé.AbstractIn this article, we show that by biopatterning probe molecules at the nanoscale using soft lithography, protein biochips can be produced at a significantly lower cost for their use as a systematic method of molecular analysis for medical diagnosis purposes. The combination of multiplexed nanoscale microcontact printing and label-free optical detection using the principle of light diffraction is implemented for generating engineered glass slides for analysis, and a dedicated diffractive scanner for reading the multiplexed results of an assay.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2013

Investigation of Aspergillus fumigatus biofilm formation by various "omics" approaches.

Anne Beauvais; Vera Pähtz; John G. Gibbons; Véronique Anton Leberre; Remi Beau; Kazutoshi Shibuya; Antonis Rokas; Jean François; Olaf Kniemeyer; Axel A. Brakhage; Jean Paul Latgé


Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2010

Simple surface chemistry to immobilize DNA probes that significantly increases sensitivity and spots density of surface plasmon resonance imaging based microarray systems

Flavien Pillet; Christophe Thibault; Sophie Bellon; Emmanuel Maillart; Emmanuelle Trévisiol; Christophe Vieu; Jean François; Véronique Anton Leberre


Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2011

Surface plasmon resonance imaging (SPRi) as an alternative technique for rapid and quantitative screening of small molecules, useful in drug discovery

Flavien Pillet; Carmen Romera; Emmanuelle Trévisiol; Sophie Bellon; Marie-Paule Teulade-Fichou; Jean-Marie François; Geneviève Pratviel; Véronique Anton Leberre


Translational Oncology | 2010

An approach to the study of gene expression in hepatocarcinogenesis initiation.

Beltràn-Ramírez Olga; Serguei Sokol; Véronique Anton Leberre; Jean François; Saúl Villa-Treviño

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Anne Abot

University of Toulouse

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