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Dive into the research topics where Véronique Piller is active.

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Featured researches published by Véronique Piller.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Changes in metabolic chemical reporter structure yield a selective probe of O-GlcNAc modification.

Kelly N. Chuh; Balyn W. Zaro; Friedrich Piller; Véronique Piller; Matthew R. Pratt

Metabolic chemical reporters (MCRs) of glycosylation are analogues of monosaccharides that contain bioorthogonal functionalities and enable the direct visualization and identification of glycoproteins from living cells. Each MCR was initially thought to report on specific types of glycosylation. We and others have demonstrated that several MCRs are metabolically transformed and enter multiple glycosylation pathways. Therefore, the development of selective MCRs remains a key unmet goal. We demonstrate here that 6-azido-6-deoxy-N-acetyl-glucosamine (6AzGlcNAc) is a specific MCR for O-GlcNAcylated proteins. Biochemical analysis and comparative proteomics with 6AzGlcNAc, N-azidoacetyl-glucosamine (GlcNAz), and N-azidoacetyl-galactosamine (GalNAz) revealed that 6AzGlcNAc exclusively labels intracellular proteins, while GlcNAz and GalNAz are incorporated into a combination of intracellular and extracellular/lumenal glycoproteins. Notably, 6AzGlcNAc cannot be biosynthetically transformed into the corresponding UDP sugar-donor by the canonical salvage-pathway that requires phosphorylation at the 6-hydroxyl. In vitro experiments showed that 6AzGlcNAc can bypass this roadblock through direct phosphorylation of its 1-hydroxyl by the enzyme phosphoacetylglucosamine mutase (AGM1). Taken together, 6AzGlcNAc enables the specific analysis of O-GlcNAcylated proteins, and these results suggest that specific MCRs for other types of glycosylation can be developed. Additionally, our data demonstrate that cells are equipped with a somewhat unappreciated metabolic flexibility with important implications for the biosynthesis of natural and unnatural carbohydrates.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Evaluation of analogues of GalNAc as substrates for enzymes of the mammalian GalNAc salvage pathway.

Sabrina Pouilly; Vanessa Bourgeaux; Friedrich Piller; Véronique Piller

Changes in glycosylation are correlated to disease and associated with differentiation processes. Experimental tools are needed to investigate the physiological implications of these changes either by labeling of the modified glycans or by blocking their biosynthesis. N-Acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) is a monosaccharide widely encountered in glycolipids, proteoglycans, and glycoproteins; once taken up by cells it can be converted through a salvage pathway to UDP-GalNAc, which is further used by glycosyltransferases to build glycans. In order to find new reporter molecules able to integrate into cellular glycans, synthetic analogues of GalNAc were prepared and tested as substrates of both enzymes acting sequentially in the GalNAc salvage pathway, galactokinase 2 (GK2) and uridylpyrophosphorylase AGX1. Detailed in vitro assays identified the GalNAc analogues that can be transformed into sugar nucleotides and revealed several bottlenecks in the pathway: a modification on C6 is not tolerated by GK2; AGX1 can use all products of GK2 although with various efficiencies; and all analogues transformed into UDP-GalNAc analogues except those with alterations on C4 are substrates for the polypeptide GalNAc transferase T1. Besides, all analogues that could be incorporated in vitro into O-glycans were also integrated into cellular O-glycans as attested by their detection on the cell surface of CHO-ldlD cells. Altogether our results show that GalNAc analogues can help to better define structural requirements of the donor substrates for the enzymes involved in GalNAc metabolism, and those that are incorporated into cells will prove valuable for the development of novel diagnostic and therapeutic tools.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2003

Synthesis and biological evaluation of new UDP-GalNAc analogues for the study of polypeptide-α-GalNAc-transferases

Patricia Busca; Véronique Piller; Friedrich Piller; Olivier R. Martin

A series of three O-methylated UDP-GalNAc analogues have been synthesised using a divergent strategy from a 3,6-di-O-pivaloyl GlcNAc derivative. The biological activity of these probes toward polypeptide-α-GalNAc-transferase T1 has been investigated. This study shows that this glycosyltransferase exhibits a very high substrate specificity.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2017

Coupling of Immunostimulants to Live Cells through Metabolic Glycoengineering and Bioorthogonal Click Chemistry

Aline Mongis; Friedrich Piller; Véronique Piller

The present study investigated the potential of metabolic glycoengineering followed by bioorthogonal click chemistry for introducing into cell-surface glycans different immunomodulating molecules. Mouse tumor models EG7 and MC38-OVA were treated with Ac4GalNAz and Ac4ManNAz followed by ligation of immunostimulants to modified cell-surface glycans of the living cells through bioorthogonal click chemistry. The presence of covalently bound oligosaccharide and oligonucleotide immunostimulants could be clearly established. The activation of a reporter macrophage cell line was determined. Depending on the tumor cell line, covalently and noncovalently bound CpG activated the macrophages by between 67 and 100% over controls. EG7 cells with covalently attached immunostimulants and controls were injected subcutaneously into C57BL/6 mice. All tumor cells subjected to the complete treatment with control molecules formed tumors like nontreated cells confirming cell viability. However, when CpG oligonucleotide was linked to cell-surface glycans, tumor growth was slowed significantly (60% reduction, n = 10, by covalently bound CpG compared to noncovalently bound CpG, n = 10). When mice that had not developed large tumors were challenged with unmodified EG7 cells, no new tumors developed, suggesting protection through the immune system.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015

Metabolic Glyco-Engineering in Eukaryotic Cells and Selected Applications.

Friedrich Piller; Aline Mongis; Véronique Piller

By metabolic glyco-engineering cellular glycoconjugates are modified through the incorporation of synthetic monosaccharides which are usually analogues of naturally present sugars. In order to get incorporated, the monosaccharides need to enter the cytoplasm and to be substrates for the enzymes necessary for their transformation into activated sugars, most often nucleotide sugars. These have to be substrates for glycosyltransferases which finally catalyze their incorporation into glycans. Such pathways are difficult to reconstitute in vitro and therefore new monosaccharide analogues have to be tested in tissue culture for their suitability in metabolic glyco-engineering. For this, glycosylation mutants are the most appropriate since they are unable to synthesize specific glycans but through the introduction of the monosaccharide analogues they may express some glycans at the cell surface with the unnatural sugar incorporated. The presence of those glycans can be easily and quantitatively detected by lectin binding or by chemical methods identifying specific sugars. Monosaccharide analogues can also block the pathways leading to sugar incorporation, thus inhibiting the synthesis of glycan structures which is also easily detectable at the cell surface by lectin labeling. The most useful and most frequently employed application of metabolic glyco-engineering is the introduction of reactive groups which can undergo bio-orthogonal click reactions for the efficient labeling of glycans at the surface of live cells.


Blood | 2005

Genetic complementation reveals a novel human congenital disorder of glycosylation of type II, due to inactivation of the Golgi CMP-sialic acid transporter

Iván Martínez-Duncker; Thierry Dupré; Véronique Piller; Friedrich Piller; Jean-Jacques Candelier; Catherine Trichet; Gil Tchernia; Rafael Oriol; Rosella Mollicone


Cancer Research | 1997

Increased α2,6 sialylation of N-glycans in a transgenic mouse model of hepatocellular carcinoma

Dominique Pousset; Véronique Piller; Nicole Bureaud; Michel Monsigny; Friedrich Piller


Protein Engineering | 1997

Fold recognition and molecular modeling of a lectin-like domain in UDP-GalNAc : Polypeptide N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferases

Anne Imberty; Véronique Piller; Friedrich Piller; Christelle Breton


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1986

Isolation and characterization of an N-acetylgalactosamine specific lectin from Salvia sclarea seeds.

Véronique Piller; Friedrich Piller; Jean-Pierre Cartron


Glycobiology | 2006

Enzymatic large-scale synthesis of MUC6-Tn glycoconjugates for antitumor vaccination

Teresa Freire; Richard Lo-Man; Friedrich Piller; Véronique Piller; Claude Leclerc; Sylvie Bay

Collaboration


Dive into the Véronique Piller's collaboration.

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Friedrich Piller

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Aline Mongis

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anne Imberty

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christelle Breton

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Michel Monsigny

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Vincent Aucagne

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Iván Martínez-Duncker

Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos

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Agnès F. Delmas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Alain Legrand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Annie-Claude Roche

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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