134 research outputs found

    Structure quaternaire des récepteurs de chimiokines CXCR4 et CCR2 et interaction avec leurs effecteurs

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    Thèse réalisée en cotutelle avec l'université Montpellier2 dans le laboratoire de pharmacologie moléculaire de Jean-Philippe Pin à l'institut de génomique fonctionnelle (IGF), Montpellier, France.Les récepteurs couplés aux protéines G (RCPG) sont une famille très diversifiée de protéines membranaires capables de répondre à un grand nombre de signaux chimiques tels que des photons, des molécules odorantes, ou des hormones. En plus de cette diversité, l’étude des RCPG montre que des associations protéiques spécifiques multiplient les possibilités de signalisation de chacun de ces récepteurs. En permettant d’atténuer, de potentialiser, ou de générer une nouvelle voie de signalisation, l’association des RCPG en oligomères s’avère une importante source de diversité. L’utilisation du transfert d’énergie de résonance de bioluminescence (BRET) qui permet de détecter les interactions protéiques a révélé de nombreuses associations de RCPG. Durant cette thèse, des outils ont été développés pour combiner efficacement le BRET à des essais de complémentation de protéines (PCA) dans le but de savoir si l’oligomérisation des RCPG pouvait impliquer plus de deux récepteurs. Les résultats présentés montrent que les récepteurs de chimiokines CXCR4 et CCR2 forment des homo et hétéro tétramères, et que l’activation d’un dimère CCR2 peut moduler la conformation d’un dimère CXCR4 par un changement conformationnel trans-récepteur. La coopérativité négative de liaison de ligand qui a été démontrée auparavant entre CXCR4 et CCR2 dans des lymphocytes T CD4+ exprimant les récepteurs de manière endogène confirme la validité biologique de cette interaction. Les données présentées suggèrent également que ces complexes peuvent engager les effecteurs Gαi et β-arrestine2, indiquant qu’ils représentent la forme fonctionnelle de ces récepteurs. Enfin, nous avons pu confirmer que chaque récepteur de l’hétérodimère CXCR4-CCR2 est impliqué dans l’engagement des effecteurs lors de l’activation de CCR2. Un autre niveau de complexité dans la signalisation des RCPG est atteint par leur capacité à coupler de multiples protéines G. La liaison du facteur dérivé des cellules stromales (SDF-1) au récepteur CXCR4 permet la migration des lymphocytes T par une voie de signalisation dépendante de la protéine Gαi. Nous avons pu démontrer en revanche que la migration des cellules de cancer du sein était initiée par un couplage de CXCR4 à la voie Gα13-Rho pour former des métastases dans des organes distants. Enfin, un dernier niveau de régulation des RCPG a été abordé par l’étude de la phosphorylation de CXCR4 suite à son activation, qui permet la désensibilisation du récepteur et l’engagement de voies de signalisation dépendantes de la β-arrestine. Il apparaît que la désensibilisation de la voie du calcium serait médiée par la phosphorylation de CXCR4 par les kinases des RCPG (GRK) GRK2 et GRK6 et le recrutement de β- arrestine2, alors GRK3, GRK6 et la β-arrestine1 potentialiseraient l’activation des kinases régulées par les signaux extracellulaires (ERK1/2). Nous suggérons également que c’est la phosphorylation de l’extrémité C-terminale de CXCR4 qui permettrait son association avec la β-arrestine.G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are a diverse family of membrane proteins capable of responding to a large number of extracellular stimuli including photons, odorant molecules and hormones. In addition to this diversity, it has been shown that GPCRs form specific protein:protein interactions, multiplying the signalling possibilities of each of these receptors. With the ability to diminish, to potentiate or even generate new signalling pathways, the oligomeric association of GPCRs plays an important role in generating this diversity. The use of bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET), which allows the detection of interactions among proteins, has revealed numerous associations between GPCRs. During this thesis, tools have been developed that effectively combine BRET with protein complementation assays (PCA) with the goal of determining if interactions between GPCRs could involve more than two receptors. The results show that the chemokine receptors CXCR4 and CCR2 form both homo and hetero tetramers, and that the activation of a dimer of CCR2 can modulate the conformation of a CXCR4 dimer through a transreceptor conformational change. Negative cooperativity of ligand binding has previously been demonstrated between CXCR4 and CCR2 in CD4+ T lymphocytes endogenously expressing the receptors, confirming the biological validity of this interaction. The data presented also suggests that these complexes can engage the effector proteins Gαi and β- arrestin 2, indicating that they represent a functional form of the receptors. Furthermore, we have confirmed that each receptor of the CXCR4-CCR2 heterodimer is implicated in the engagement of effectors during the activation of CCR2. An additional level of complexity in GPCR-promoted signaling exists in their capacity to couple of multiple G proteins. Binding of stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1) to CXCR4 is known to promote T lymphocyte migration through a Gαi-dependent signalling pathway. In addition to this mechanism, we have demonstrated that breast cancer cell migration can initiated by a coupling of CXCR4 to the Gα13-Rho pathway, leading to the formation of metastases in distant organs. Finally, a novel level of GPCR regulation was revealed through the study of CXCR4 phosphorylation following its activation, which leads to the desensitization of the receptor and the engagement of β-arrestin-dependent signalling pathways. It appears that the desensitization of calcium signalling is mediated through the phosphorylation of CXCR4 by the GPCR kinases (GRKs) GRK2 and GRK6 and the recruitment of β-arrestin 2, whereas GRK3, GRK6 and β-arrestin 1 potentiate the activation of extracellular regulated kinase (ERK1/2). We also propose that the phosphorylation of the far C-terminal tail of CXCR4 is required for the interaction between the receptor and β-arrestin

    Nuclear magnetic resonance study of the magnetic-field-induced ordered phase in the NiCl2-4SC(NH2)2 compound

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    Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study of the high magnetic field (H) part of the Bose-Einstein condensed (BEC) phase of the quasi-onedimensional (quasi-1D) antiferromagnetic quantum spin-chain compound NiCl2-4SC(NH2)2 (DTN) was performed. We precisely determined the phase boundary, Tc(H), down to 40 mK; the critical boson density, n_c(Tc); and the absolute value of the BEC order parameter S_perp at very low temperature (T = 0.12 K). All results are accurately reproduced by numerical quantum Monte Carlo simulations of a realistic three-dimensional (3D) model Hamiltonian. Approximate analytical predictions based on the 1D Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid description are found to be precise for Tc(H), but less so for S_perp(H), which is more sensitive to the strength of 3D couplings, in particular close to the critical field. A mean-field treatment, based on the Hartree-Fock-Popov description, is found to be valid only up to n_c = 4% (T < 0.3 K), while for higher n_c boson interactions appear to modify the density of states.Comment: Manuscript (6 pages, 3 figures) and the corresponding Supplemental material (5 pages, 6 figures), altogether 11 pages and 9 figure

    1,3-Bis{(+)-(S)-[1-(1-naphth­yl)eth­yl]imino­meth­yl}benzene dichloro­methane solvate

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    In the title compound, C32H28N2·CH2Cl2, the complete Schiff base and solvent molecules are both generated by crystallographic twofold axes, with the two C atoms of the former and the C atom of the latter lying on the rotation axis. The central benzene ring is substituted with two chiral groups including imine functionalities, with the common E configuration. The dihedral angle between the central benzene ring and the terminal naphthalene ring is 45.42 (9)° and that between the two naphthalene rings is 89.16 (8)°. The conformation of the Schiff base allows solvent mol­ecules to fill the voids in the crystal, affording a stable 1:1 solvate, but the solvent inter­acts poorly with the Schiff base, as reflected by its rather high displacement parameters

    LITpro: a model fitting software for optical interferometry

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    9 pagesInternational audienceLITpro is a software for fitting models on data obtained from various stellar optical interferometers, like the VLTI. As a baseline, for modeling the object, it provides a set of elementary geometrical and center-to-limb darkening functions, all combinable together. But it is also designed to make very easy the implementation of more specific models with their own parameters, to be able to use models closer to astrophysical considerations. So LITpro only requires the modeling functions to compute the Fourier transform of the object at given spatial frequencies, and wavelengths and time if needed. From this, LITpro computes all the necessary quantities as needed (e.g. visibilities, spectral energy distribution, partial derivatives of the model, map of the object model). The fitting engine, especially designed for this kind of optimization, is based on a modified Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm and has been successfully tested on real data in a prototype version. It includes a Trust Region Method, minimizing a heterogeneous non-linear and non-convex criterion and allows the user to set boundaries on free parameters. From a robust local minimization algorithm and a starting points strategy, a global optimization solution is effectively achieved. Tools have been developped to help users to find the global minimum. LITpro is also designed for performing fitting on heterogeneous data. It will be shown, on an example, how it fits simultaneously interferometric data and spectral energy distribution, with some benefits on the reliability of the solution and a better estimation of errors and correlations on the parameters. That is indeed necessary since present interferometric data are generally multi-wavelengths

    Strikingly Different Roles of SARS-CoV-2 Fusion Peptides Uncovered by Neutron Scattering.

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    Funder: National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)Funder: ANR/NSF-PIREFunder: Science and Technology Facilities CouncilFunder: Institut Laue LangevinCoronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19), a potentially lethal respiratory illness caused by the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, emerged in the end of 2019 and has since spread aggressively across the globe. A thorough understanding of the molecular mechanisms of cellular infection by coronaviruses is therefore of utmost importance. A critical stage in infection is the fusion between viral and host membranes. Here, we present a detailed investigation of the role of selected SARS-CoV-2 Spike fusion peptides, and the influence of calcium and cholesterol, in this fusion process. Structural information from specular neutron reflectometry and small angle neutron scattering, complemented by dynamics information from quasi-elastic and spin-echo neutron spectroscopy, revealed strikingly different functions encoded in the Spike fusion domain. Calcium drives the N-terminal of the Spike fusion domain to fully cross the host plasma membrane. Removing calcium, however, reorients the peptide back to the lipid leaflet closest to the virus, leading to significant changes in lipid fluidity and rigidity. In conjunction with other regions of the fusion domain, which are also positioned to bridge and dehydrate viral and host membranes, the molecular events leading to cell entry by SARS-CoV-2 are proposed

    A new inhibitor of the β-arrestin/AP2 endocytic complex reveals interplay between GPCR internalization and signalling.

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    AbstractIn addition to G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) desensitization and endocytosis, β-arrestin recruitment to ligand-stimulated GPCRs promotes non-canonical signalling cascades. Distinguishing the respective contributions of β-arrestin recruitment to the receptor and β-arrestin-promoted endocytosis in propagating receptor signalling has been limited by the lack of selective analytical tools. Here, using a combination of virtual screening and cell-based assays, we have identified a small molecule that selectively inhibits the interaction between β-arrestin and the β2-adaptin subunit of the clathrin adaptor protein AP2 without interfering with the formation of receptor/β-arrestin complexes. This selective β-arrestin/β2-adaptin inhibitor (Barbadin) blocks agonist-promoted endocytosis of the prototypical β2-adrenergic (β2AR), V2-vasopressin (V2R) and angiotensin-II type-1 (AT1R) receptors, but does not affect β-arrestin-independent (transferrin) or AP2-independent (endothelin-A) receptor internalization. Interestingly, Barbadin fully blocks V2R-stimulated ERK1/2 activation and blunts cAMP accumulation promoted by both V2R and β2AR, supporting the concept of β-arrestin/AP2-dependent signalling for both G protein-dependent and -independent pathways.</jats:p

    The experimental power of FR900359 to study Gq-regulated biological processes.

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    Despite the discovery of heterotrimeric αβγ G proteins ∼25 years ago, their selective perturbation by cell-permeable inhibitors remains a fundamental challenge. Here we report that the plant-derived depsipeptide FR900359 (FR) is ideally suited to this task. Using a multifaceted approach we systematically characterize FR as a selective inhibitor of Gq/11/14 over all other mammalian Gα isoforms and elaborate its molecular mechanism of action. We also use FR to investigate whether inhibition of Gq proteins is an effective post-receptor strategy to target oncogenic signalling, using melanoma as a model system. FR suppresses many of the hallmark features that are central to the malignancy of melanoma cells, thereby providing new opportunities for therapeutic intervention. Just as pertussis toxin is used extensively to probe and inhibit the signalling of Gi/o proteins, we anticipate that FR will at least be its equivalent for investigating the biological relevance of Gq
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