41 research outputs found

    MRI-visible polymer based on poly(methyl methacrylate) for imaging applications

    Get PDF
    Macromolecular contrast agents are very attractive to afford efficient magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) visualization of implantable medical devices. In this work, we report on the grafting of a Gd-based DTPA contrast agent onto a poly(methyl methacrylate) derivative backbone by combining free radical polymerization and copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC). Using free radical polymerization, poly(methyl methacrylate-co-propargyl methacrylate) copolymers were prepared with a control of the ratio in propargyl methacrylate monomer units. The synthesis of a new azido monofunctionalized DTPA ligand was also reported and characterized by 1H NMR and mass spectroscopy. After complexation with gadolinium, this ligand has been grafted on the polymer backbone by click chemistry reaction. The obtained macromolecular contrast agent was then coated on a polypropylene mesh using the airbrushing technique and the mesh was assessed for MRI visualization at 7 teslas. The polymeric contrast agent was also tested for cytocompatibility and stability to assess its suitability for biomedical applications

    Role of malignant hyperthermia domain in the regulation of Ca2+ release channel (Ryanodine Receptor) of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum

    Get PDF
    A fusion protein encompassing Gly341 of the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor was used to raise monoclonal antibodies; epitope mapping demonstrates that monoclonal antibody 419 (mAb419) reacts with a sequence a few residues upstream from Gly341. The mAb419 was then used to probe ryanodine receptor (RYR) functions. Our results show that upon incubation of triads vesicles with mAb419 the Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release rate at pCa 8 was increased. Equilibrium evaluation of [3H]ryanodine binding at different [Ca2+] indicates that mAb419 shifted the half-maximal [Ca2+] for stimulation of ryanodine binding to lower value (0.1 versus 1.2 microM). Such functional effects may be due to a direct action of the Ab on the Ca2+ binding domain of the RYR or to the perturbation by the Ab of the intramolecular interaction between the immunopositive region and regulatory domain of the RYR. The latter hypothesis was tested directly using the optical biosensor BIAcore (Pharmacia Biotech Inc.): we show that the immunopositive RYR polypeptide is able to interact with the native RYR complex. Ligand overlays with immunopositive digoxigenin-RYR fusion protein indicate that such an interaction might occur with a calmodulin binding domain (defined by residues 3010-3225) and with a polypeptide defined by residues 799-1172. In conclusion our results suggest that the stimulation by the mAb419 of the RYR channel activity is due to the perturbation of an intramolecular interaction between the immunopositive polypeptide and a Ca2+ regulatory site probably corresponding to a calmodulin bindin

    The yeast plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase. An essential change of conformation triggered by H+.

    No full text
    The plasma membrane of Schizosaccharomyces pombe contains an H(+)-ATPase similar to the cation transport ATPases of other eukaryotic organisms. The fluorescence excitation and emission spectra of the purified H(+)-ATPase are characteristic of tryptophan residues. pH reduction from 7.5 to 5.7 produces a 4% decrease in fluorescence intensity, while a further reduction to pH 5.0 leads to an increase of fluorescence. A close correlation is observed between the pH dependence of the intrinsic fluorescence and the pH dependence of (i) ATPase activity, (ii) the fluorescence of Tb-formycin triphosphate bound to the active site, and (iii) inhibition by vanadate of ATPase activity. It is proposed that the effect of pH on intrinsic fluorescence reveals the existence of an H+ induced conformational change of the H(+)-ATPase similar to the E1----E2 transition of the other plasma membrane cation transport ATPases

    Des textiles chimioactifs décontaminants

    No full text
    International audienceUne stratégie clé pour lutter contre les agents neurotoxiques organophosphorés consiste à concevoir des épurateurs synthétiques bio-inspirés basés sur des dérivés de cyclodextrine. Leur immobilisation sur des textiles techniques fonctionnels ouvre ainsi la voie vers de nouveaux dispositifs de décontamination des pesticides et des armes chimiques. Ce projet, dénommé « TEXT-épur-OP », fait l’objet d’un partenariat public-privé financé par le programme ASTRID maturation de la Direction générale de l’armement, qui valorise les résultats d’une thèse menée dans le laboratoire COBRA

    Use of a purified and functional recombinant calcium-channel β4 subunit in surface-plasmon resonance studies

    No full text
    International audienceNative high-voltage-gated calcium channels are multi-subunit complexes comprising a pore-forming subunit Cav and at least two auxiliary subunits α2δ and β. The β subunit facilitates cell-surface expression of the channel and contributes significantly to its biophysical properties. In spite of its importance, detailed structural and functional studies are hampered by the limited availability of native β subunit. Here, we report the purification of a recombinant calcium-channel β4 subunit from bacterial extracts by using a polyhistidine tag. The purified protein is fully functional since it binds on the alpha1 interaction domain, its main Cav-binding site, and regulates the activity of P/Q calcium channel expressed in Xenopus oocytes in a similar way to the β4 subunit produced by cRNA injection. We took advantage of the functionality of the purified material to (i) develop an efficient surface-plasmon resonance assay of the interaction between two calcium channel subunits and (ii) measure, for the first time, the affinity of the recombinant His-β4 subunit for the full-length Cav2.1 channel. The availability of this purified material and the development of a surface-plasmon resonance assay opens two immediate research perspectives: (i) drug screening programmes applied to the Cav/β interaction and (ii) crystallographic studies of the calcium-channel β4 subunit

    C-terminal splice variants of P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel CaV2.1 α1 subunits are differentially regulated by Rab3-interacting molecule proteins

    No full text
    International audienceVoltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels (VDCCs) mediate neurotransmitter release controlled by presynaptic proteins such as the scaffolding proteins Rab3-interacting molecules (RIMs). RIMs confer sustained activity and anchoring of synaptic vesicles to the VDCCs. Multiple sites on the VDCC α1 and β subunits have been reported to mediate the RIMs-VDCC interaction, but their significance is unclear. Because alternative splicing of exons 44 and 47 in the P/Q-type VDCC α1 subunit CaV2.1 gene generates major variants of the CaV2.1 C-terminal region, known for associating with presynaptic proteins, we focused here on the protein regions encoded by these two exons. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments indicated that the C-terminal domain (CTD) encoded by CaV2.1 exons 40-47 interacts with the α-RIMs, RIM1α and RIM2α, and this interaction was abolished by alternative splicing that deletes the protein regions encoded by exons 44 and 47. Electrophysiological characterization of VDCC currents revealed that the suppressive effect of RIM2α on voltage-dependent inactivation (VDI) was stronger than that of RIM1α for the CaV2.1 variant containing the region encoded by exons 44 and 47. Importantly, in the CaV2.1 variant in which exons 44 and 47 were deleted, strong RIM2α-mediated VDI suppression was attenuated to a level comparable with that of RIM1α-mediated VDI suppression, which was unaffected by the exclusion of exons 44 and 47. Studies of deletion mutants of the exon 47 region identified 17 amino acid residues on the C-terminal side of a polyglutamine stretch as being essential for the potentiated VDI suppression characteristic of RIM2α. These results suggest that the interactions of the CaV2.1 CTD with RIMs enable CaV2.1 proteins to distinguish α-RIM isoforms in VDI suppression of P/Q-type VDCC currents
    corecore