53 research outputs found

    Tracking the origin and divergence of cholinesterases and neuroligins: the evolution of synaptic proteins

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    14. International Symposium on Cholinergic Mechanisms (ISCM), Hangzhou, 2013/05/05-9A cholinesterase activity can be found in all kingdoms of living organism, yet cholinesterases involved in cholinergic transmission appeared only recently in the animal phylum. Among various proteins homologous to cholinesterases, one finds neuroligins. These proteins, with an altered catalytic triad and no known hydrolytic activity, display well-identified cell adhesion properties. The availability of complete genomes of a few metazoans provides opportunities to evaluate when these two protein families emerged during evolution. In bilaterian animals, acetylcholinesterase co-localizes with proteins of cholinergic synapses while neuroligins co-localize and may interact with proteins of excitatory glutamatergic or inhibitory GABAergic/glycinergic synapses. To compare evolution of the cholinesterases and neuroligins with other proteins involved in the architecture and functioning of synapses, we devised a method to search for orthologs of these partners in genomes of model organisms representing distinct stages of metazoan evolution. Our data point to a progressive recruitment of synaptic components during evolution. This finding may shed light on the common or divergent developmental regulation events involved into the setting and maintenance of the cholinergic versus glutamatergic and GABAergic/glycinergic synapses

    CAZyme content of Pochonia chlamydosporia reflects that chitin and chitosan modification are involved in nematode parasitism

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    Pochonia chlamydosporia is a soil fungus with a multitrophic lifestyle combining endophytic and saprophytic behaviors, in addition to a nematophagous activity directed against eggs of root-knot and other plant parasitic nematodes. The carbohydrate-active enzymes encoded by the genome of P. chlamydosporia suggest that the endophytic and saprophytic lifestyles make use of a plant cell wall polysaccharide degradation machinery that can target cellulose, xylan and, to a lesser extent, pectin. This enzymatic machinery is completed by a chitin breakdown system that involves not only chitinases, but also chitin deacetylases and a large number of chitosanases. P. chlamydosporia can degrade and grow on chitin and is particularly efficient on chitosan. The relevance of chitosan breakdown during nematode egg infection is supported by the immunolocalization of chitosan in Meloidogyne javanica eggs infected by P. chlamydosporia and by the fact that the fungus expresses chitosanase and chitin deacetylase genes during egg infection. This suggests that these enzymes are important for the nematophagous activity of the fungus and they are targets for improving the capabilities of P. chlamydosporia as a biocontrol agent in agriculture.This research was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness Grant AGL2015-66833-R, with a grant from the Generalitat Valenciana to A. Aranda-Martinez (ACIF/2013/120) as well as a sabbatical grant to L.V. Lopez-Llorca (PR2015-0008)

    The molecular basis of polysaccharide cleavage by lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases.

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    Lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) are copper-containing enzymes that oxidatively break down recalcitrant polysaccharides such as cellulose and chitin. Since their discovery, LPMOs have become integral factors in the industrial utilization of biomass, especially in the sustainable generation of cellulosic bioethanol. We report here a structural determination of an LPMO-oligosaccharide complex, yielding detailed insights into the mechanism of action of these enzymes. Using a combination of structure and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, we reveal the means by which LPMOs interact with saccharide substrates. We further uncover electronic and structural features of the enzyme active site, showing how LPMOs orchestrate the reaction of oxygen with polysaccharide chains.We thank K. Rasmussen and R.M. Borup for experimental assistance, and MAXLAB, Sweden and the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF), France, for synchrotron beam time and assistance. This work was supported by the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (grant numbers BB/L000423 to P.D., G.J.D. and P.H.W., and BB/L021633/1 to G.J.D. and P.H.W.), Agence Française de l'Environnement et de la Maîtrise de l'Energie (grant number 1201C102 to B.H.), the Danish Council for Strategic Research (grant numbers 12-134923 to L.L.L. and 12-134922 to K.S.J.). Travel to synchrotrons was supported by the Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science through the Instrument Center DANSCATT and the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under BioStruct-X (grant agreement 283570). L.M., S.F., S.C. and H.D. were supported by Institut de Chimie Moléculaire de Grenoble FR 2607, LabEx ARCANE (ANR-11-LABX-0003-01), the PolyNat Carnot Institute and the French Agence Nationale de la Recherche (PNRB2005-11).This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Publishing Group via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nchembio.202

    Creating a specialist protein resource network:a meeting report for the protein bioinformatics and community resources retreat

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    During 11–12 August 2014, a Protein Bioinformatics and Community Resources Retreat was held at the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus in Hinxton, UK. This meeting brought together the principal investigators of several specialized protein resources (such as CAZy, TCDB and MEROPS) as well as those from protein databases from the large Bioinformatics centres (including UniProt and RefSeq). The retreat was divided into five sessions: (1) key challenges, (2) the databases represented, (3) best practices for maintenance and curation, (4) information flow to and from large data centers and (5) communication and funding. An important outcome of this meeting was the creation of a Specialist Protein Resource Network that we believe will improve coordination of the activities of its member resources. We invite further protein database resources to join the network and continue the dialogue

    Lytic xylan oxidases from wood-decay fungi unlock biomass degradation

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    Wood biomass is the most abundant feedstock envisioned for the development of modern biorefineries. However, the cost-ef-fective conversion of this form of biomass into commodity products is limited by its resistance to enzymatic degradation. Here we describe a new family of fungal lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) prevalent among white-rot and brown-rot basidiomycetes that is active on xylans—a recalcitrant polysaccharide abundant in wood biomass. Two AA14 LPMO members from the white-rot fungus Pycnoporus coccineus substantially increase the efficiency of wood saccharification through oxida-tive cleavage of highly refractory xylan-coated cellulose fibers. The discovery of this unique enzyme activity advances our knowledge on the degradation of woody biomass in nature and offers an innovative solution for improving enzyme cocktails for biorefinery applications

    Network of Caenorhabditis elegan's PDZ domains

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    Le domaine PDZ participe aux réseaux moléculaires à l’origine de fonctions cellulaires touchées lors de pathologies diverses. L’exploration de ce réseau par double hybride a permis d’attribuer de nouvelles fonctions putatives aux ligands protéiques des domaines PDZ du ver Caenorhabditis elegans. Les interactions ont laissé apparaitre une proportion inattendue de ligands atypiques interagissant par une séquence interne. Nous avons ensuite validé fonctionnellement in silico des groupes d’interactions de notre interactome qui forment des micro-réseaux co-exprimés par l’intégration de données de profils d’expression. Finalement, ce travail a permis la construction d’un outil exploratoire, le PIPE (PDZ Interacting Protein Explorer) qui permet de cribler l’ensemble des domaines PDZ du ver à la recherche d’interactions avec une protéine d’intérêt révélant déjà de nombreuses interactions supplémentaires entre domaines PDZ et ligandsPDZ domains allow the organization of molecular networks responsible for cellular functions essential for multicellularity as polarization or transduction of extracellular signals. Exploration of this network by two-hybrid revealed a functional diversity for ligands of Caenorhabditis elegans’s PDZ domains. New putative functions were being observed through GO-terms and an unexpected proportion of internal ligands appeared, confirmed by Co-IP. We then functionally validated in silico groups of interactions that form our interactome microarrays co-expressed by the integration of data from expression profiles. Finally, this work has enabled the construction of an exploratory tool, the PIPE (PDZ Interacting Protein Explorer) that allows screening of all PDZ domains looking for interactions with a protein of interest and had already showed many additional interactions between PDZ domains and ligand

    Relationships of human alpha/beta hydrolase fold proteins and other organophosphate-interacting proteins

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    12th International Meeting on Cholinesterases / 6th International Conference on Paraoxonase, Elche, SPAIN, 2015International audienceno abstrac
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