27 research outputs found

    Croissance et capacité reproductive d’Hypnea musciformis (Rhodophyceae, Gigartinale) de la côte atlantique marocaine

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    Les algues carraghénophytes constituent une biomasse importante sur le littoral marocain et sont exportées à l’état brut sans transformation locale, alors que l’industrie de l’agar est très développée au Maroc. Le but de notre travail est la valorisation des espèces les plus abondantes en vue de leur transformation locale. Hypnea musciformis est l’une des espèces étudiées au laboratoire et constitue une candidate potentielle à l’exploitation. Sa valorisation passe par l’étude de sa biologie en milieu naturel, puis en conditions contrôlées. Les variations saisonnières de la croissance et de la capacité reproductive de l’algue rouge Hypnea musciformis ont été suivies durant deux années dans deux localités différentes au niveau de la côte atlantique marocaine. L’étude a permis de montrer que l’espèce est fertile toute l’année avec une large dominance de la génération tétrasporophytique, et présente deux périodes actives de croissance ; la première estivale et la seconde de moindre importance, automnale. Ainsi, le cycle biologique de l’algue se trouve influencé par plusieurs facteurs environnementaux tels que la lumière, la température, la salinité, la position de l’espèce au niveau de l’estran et les réponses d’acclimatation de l’algue aux différents types d’habitats.Mots-clés : Hypnea musciformis, croissance, reproduction, analyse statistiqu

    Redox signalling in the chloroplast: structure of oxidized pea fructose-1,6-bisphosphate phosphatase.

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    Sunlight provides the energy source for the assimilation of carbon dioxide by photosynthesis, but it also provides regulatory signals that switch on specific sets of enzymes involved in the alternation of light and dark metabolisms in chloroplasts. Capture of photons by chlorophyll pigments triggers redox cascades that ultimately activate target enzymes via the reduction of regulatory disulfide bridges by thioredoxins. Here we report the structure of the oxidized, low-activity form of chloroplastic fructose-1, 6-bisphosphate phosphatase (FBPase), one of the four enzymes of the Calvin cycle whose activity is redox-regulated by light. The regulation is of allosteric nature, with a disulfide bridge promoting the disruption of the catalytic site across a distance of 20 A. Unexpectedly, regulation of plant FBPases by thiol-disulfide interchange differs in every respect from the regulation of mammalian gluconeogenic FBPases by AMP. We also report a second crystal form of oxidized FBPase whose tetrameric structure departs markedly from D(2) symmetry, a rare event in oligomeric structures, and the structure of a constitutively active mutant that is unable to form the regulatory disulfide bridge. Altogether, these structures provide a structural basis for redox regulation in the chloroplast

    Recapture of [S]-allantoin, the product of the two-step degradation of uric acid, by urate oxidase

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    Urate oxidase from Aspergillus flavus catalyzes the degradation of uric acid to [S]-allantoin through 5-hydroxyisourate as a metastable intermediate. The second degradation step is thought either catalyzed by another specific enzyme, or spontaneous. The structure of the enzyme was known at high resolution by X-ray diffraction of I222 crystals complexed with a purine-type inhibitor (8-azaxanthin). Analyzing the X-ray structure of urate oxidase treated with an excess of urate, the natural substrate, shows unexpectedly that the active site recaptures [S]-allantoin from the racemic end product of a second degradation ste

    Crystal structure determination of In 3

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    Arginine residues as stabilizing elements in proteins

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    Site-specific substitutions of arginine for lysine in the thermostable D-xylose isomerase (XI) from Actinoplanes missouriensis are shown to impart significant heat stability enhancement in the presence of sugar substrates most probably by interfering with nonenzymatic glycation. The same substitutions are also found to increase beat stability in the absence of any sugar derivatives, where a mechanism based on prevention of glycation can no longer be invoked. This rather conservative substitution is moreover shown to improve thermostability in two other structurally unrelated proteins, human copper, zinc-superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) and D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) from Bacillus subtilis. The stabilizing effect of Lys --> Arg substitutions is rationalized on the basis of a detailed analysis of the crystal structures of wild-type XI and of engineered variants with Lys --> Arg substitution at four distinct locations, residues 253, 309, 319, and 323. Molecular model building analysis of the structures of wild-type and mutant CuZnSOD (K9R) and GAPDH (G281K and G281R) is used to explain the observed stability enhancement in these proteins. In addition to demonstrating that even thermostable proteins can lend themselves to further stability improvement, our findings provide direct evidence that arginine residues are important stabilizing elements in proteins. Moreover, the stabilizing role of electrostatic interactions, particularly between subunits in oligomeric proteins, is documented

    Virulence of Leishmania major in macrophages and mice requires the gluconeogenic enzyme fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase

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    Leishmania are protozoan parasites that replicate within mature phagolysosomes of mammalian macrophages. To define the biochemical composition of the phagosome and carbon source requirements of intracellular stages of L. major, we investigated the role and requirement for the gluconeogenic enzyme fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBP). L. major FBP was constitutively expressed in both extracellular and intracellular stages and was primarily targeted to glycosomes, modified peroxisomes that also contain glycolytic enzymes. A L. major FBP-null mutant was unable to grow in the absence of hexose, and suspension in glycerol-containing medium resulted in rapid depletion of internal carbohydrate reserves. L. major Δfbp promastigotes were internalized by macrophages and differentiated into amastigotes but were unable to replicate in the macrophage phagolysosome. Similarly, the mutant persisted in mice but failed to generate normal lesions. The data suggest that Leishmania amastigotes reside in a glucose-poor phagosome and depend heavily on nonglucose carbon sources. Feeding experiments with [(13)C]fatty acids showed that fatty acids are poor gluconeogenic substrates, indicating that amino acids are the major carbon source in vivo. The need for amino acids may have forced Leishmania spp. to adapt to life in the mature phagolysosome
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